In the latest SlateCast episode, XYO co-founder Markus Levin joined CryptoSlate’s hosts to unpack why decentralized physical infrastructure networks (DePIN) areIn the latest SlateCast episode, XYO co-founder Markus Levin joined CryptoSlate’s hosts to unpack why decentralized physical infrastructure networks (DePIN) are

XYO’s Markus Levin: Why a data-native L1 could become AI’s “proof of origin” backbone

In the latest SlateCast episode, XYO co-founder Markus Levin joined CryptoSlate’s hosts to unpack why decentralized physical infrastructure networks (DePIN) are moving beyond niche experiments—and why XYO built a purpose-built Layer-1 to handle the kind of data AI and real-world applications increasingly demand.

Levin’s ambition for the network is blunt: “First, I think XYO is gonna have eight billion nodes,” he said, calling it a stretch goal—but one he believes matches where the category is headed.

DePIN’s “every corner of the world” thesis

Levin framed DePIN as a structural shift in how markets coordinate physical infrastructure, pointing to rapid growth expectations for the sector. He cited a World Economic Forum projection that DePIN could expand from roughly today’s tens of billions to trillions by 2028.

For XYO, scale is not hypothetical. One of the hosts noted that the network has grown “with over 10 million nodes,” setting the stage for a conversation focused less on “what if” and more on what breaks when real-world data volume becomes the product.

Proof of origin for AI: the data problem, not just compute

Asked about deepfakes and the collapse of trust in media, Levin argued that AI’s bottleneck isn’t only computation—it’s provenance. “Whereas DePIN, what you can do is you can, uh, prove where data comes from,” he said, outlining a model where data can be verified end-to-end, tracked into training pipelines, and queried when systems need ground truth.

In his view, provenance creates a feedback loop: if a model is accused of hallucinating, it can check whether the underlying input is verifiably sourced—or request new, specific data from a decentralized network rather than scraping unreliable sources.

Why a data-native Layer-1 matters

XYO spent years trying not to build a chain, Levin said—operating as middleware between real-world signals and smart contracts. But “nobody built it,” and the network’s data volume forced the issue.

He explained the design goal simply: “Blockchain can’t bloat… and it’s just built for data really.”

XYO’s approach centers on mechanisms such as Proof of Perfect and “lookback” style constraints intended to keep node requirements lightweight, even as datasets grow.

COIN onboarding: turning non-crypto users into nodes

A key growth lever has been the COIN app, which Levin described as a way to transform mobile phones into XYO network nodes.

Rather than pushing users into immediate token volatility, the app uses dollar-tied points and broader redemption options—then bridges users into crypto rails over time.

Dual token model: aligning incentives with XL1

Levin said the dual token system is designed to separate ecosystem rewards/security from chain activity costs. “We’re extremely excited about this dual token system,” he said, describing $XYO as the external staking/governance/security asset and $XL1 as the internal gas/transactions token used on XYO Layer One.

Real-world partners: charging infrastructure and mapping-grade POI data

Levin pointed to new partnerships as early “killer app” momentum inside the broader DePIN ecosystem, citing a deal with Piggycell—a large South Korean charging network that needs proof-of-location and plans to tokenize data on XYO Layer One.

He also described a separate proof-of-location use case involving point-of-interest datasets (hours, photos, venue info), claiming a major geolocation partner found issues in its own dataset “in 60% of the cases,” while XYO-sourced data was “99.9% correct,” enabling downstream mapping for large enterprises.

Taken together, Levin’s message was consistent: if AI and RWAs need trustworthy inputs, the next competitive frontier may be less about faster models—and more about verifiable data pipelines anchored in the real world.

The post XYO’s Markus Levin: Why a data-native L1 could become AI’s “proof of origin” backbone appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Market Opportunity
XYO Logo
XYO Price(XYO)
$0.00546
$0.00546$0.00546
-1.79%
USD
XYO (XYO) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

UNI Technical Analysis Jan 22

UNI Technical Analysis Jan 22

The post UNI Technical Analysis Jan 22 appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. UNI is trading at the $4.82 level with a %3.92 drop intraday. While the primary downtrend
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/01/23 06:45
Aave DAO to Shut Down 50% of L2s While Doubling Down on GHO

Aave DAO to Shut Down 50% of L2s While Doubling Down on GHO

The post Aave DAO to Shut Down 50% of L2s While Doubling Down on GHO appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Aave DAO is gearing up for a significant overhaul by shutting down over 50% of underperforming L2 instances. It is also restructuring its governance framework and deploying over $100 million to boost GHO. This could be a pivotal moment that propels Aave back to the forefront of on-chain lending or sparks unprecedented controversy within the DeFi community. Sponsored Sponsored ACI Proposes Shutting Down 50% of L2s The “State of the Union” report by the Aave Chan Initiative (ACI) paints a candid picture. After a turbulent period in the DeFi market and internal challenges, Aave (AAVE) now leads in key metrics: TVL, revenue, market share, and borrowing volume. Aave’s annual revenue of $130 million surpasses the combined cash reserves of its competitors. Tokenomics improvements and the AAVE token buyback program have also contributed to the ecosystem’s growth. Aave global metrics. Source: Aave However, the ACI’s report also highlights several pain points. First, regarding the Layer-2 (L2) strategy. While Aave’s L2 strategy was once a key driver of success, it is no longer fit for purpose. Over half of Aave’s instances on L2s and alt-L1s are not economically viable. Based on year-to-date data, over 86.6% of Aave’s revenue comes from the mainnet, indicating that everything else is a side quest. On this basis, ACI proposes closing underperforming networks. The DAO should invest in key networks with significant differentiators. Second, ACI is pushing for a complete overhaul of the “friendly fork” framework, as most have been unimpressive regarding TVL and revenue. In some cases, attackers have exploited them to Aave’s detriment, as seen with Spark. Sponsored Sponsored “The friendly fork model had a good intention but bad execution where the DAO was too friendly towards these forks, allowing the DAO only little upside,” the report states. Third, the instance model, once a smart…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 02:28
Pi Coin Price Prediction: Critical Support Level is Being Tested – Long-Term Setup Could Surprise Everyone

Pi Coin Price Prediction: Critical Support Level is Being Tested – Long-Term Setup Could Surprise Everyone

The Pi Coin price prediction has become much more bullish today, after the alt bounced strongly off a key support level.
Share
Coinstats2026/01/23 06:44