The decentralized application space has reached a turning point. After explosive growth in the last few years, activity across DeFi, AI agents, prediction markets, and real-world asset tokenization continues to surge. Yet, while execution and consensus layers have advanced, the data and verification layer is still catching up.

Oracles remain one of the most centralized components of Web3 infrastructure. Many operate through tightly controlled networks with opaque pricing and limited programmability. For builders at the frontier (especially in AI-integrated applications) these constraints can be the difference between launching and stalling.

That’s where Blocksense comes in. With a service-oriented blockchain architecture designed as a universal verification layer, Blocksense introduces zkSchellingCoin, zkTLS feeds, and the Boundless Throughput Engine to solve the foundational problems of connectivity and scale. Already integrated across dozens of ecosystems, the protocol is rapidly becoming the backbone for verified data, compute, and AI inference.

We sat down with Magnus Ahmad, CEO of Blocksense, to discuss the company’s evolving focus, why verification is the missing piece for the autonomous economy, and what comes next.

 

 

Magnus, you recently stepped in as CEO of Blocksense. What drew you to this mission?

When I looked at the state of Web3 infrastructure, one thing stood out: we’ve solved execution, but we haven’t solved truth. Blockchains are secure in themselves, but the moment they need to interact with the outside world — or even with complex, non-deterministic systems like AI — the guarantees break down.

Blocksense was founded to solve this. What excites me is that the same foundation we built for oracles naturally extends into a much larger role: being the universal verification layer for the autonomous economy. That means enabling any service (DeFi protocol, an AI agent, or a supply chain application) to access verified data and computation, at scale, without depending on trusted intermediaries.

 

 

Oracles have been around for years. How is Blocksense different, especially now with the AI focus?

Most oracle networks today are still opaque, centralized service providers deciding what data gets published. New feeds are agreed upon in backroom deals with untransparent pricing, frequently leading to

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