Close Menu
Cryptosphere Update
  • Crypto News
  • Economy
  • Crypto Markets
  • World News
  • Technology
  • Breaking Views
What's Hot

Trump administration moves to ease regulations on medical marijuana

April 23, 2026

SK Hynix’s profits soar 5x on AI demand, strengthens NVIDIA’s supply chain

April 23, 2026

Iran’s economy in charts: hyperinflation and depreciation of the rial

April 23, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Trump administration moves to ease regulations on medical marijuana
  • SK Hynix’s profits soar 5x on AI demand, strengthens NVIDIA’s supply chain
  • Iran’s economy in charts: hyperinflation and depreciation of the rial
  • Deadly chemical spill in West Virginia
  • Kevin Warsh’s favorite anti-inflation measures could hit him again
  • Coinbase says Algorand and Aptos are better prepared for quantum threats
  • Two University of South Florida doctoral students missing, police say
  • Bitcoin (BTC) hits 11-week high, popular altcoin soars 22%: Market Watch
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Cryptosphere Update
  • Crypto News
  • Economy
  • Crypto Markets
  • World News
  • Technology
  • Breaking Views
Crypto Heatmap
Cryptosphere Update
Home » Why Verifiable Randomness Is Important for AI, Crypto, and Distributed Technology
Breaking Views

Why Verifiable Randomness Is Important for AI, Crypto, and Distributed Technology

Leslie StewartBy Leslie StewartJuly 14, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Why Verifiable Randomness Is Important For Ai, Crypto, And Distributed
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Below are guest posts and opinions Felix XUFounder of , ARPA Network.

Enter one of CloudFlare’s global offices and find rare decorations. In San Francisco, it is a floor-to-ceiling lava lamp known as the “Entropy Wall.” In London it is an “unpredictable pendulum.” These are more than just backgrounds. They are the creation of random mills, exemplifying the ongoing creative and engineering races for true randomness.

Randomness is the unnamed hero of the modern Internet, the foundation of encryption, the backbone of fair gaming systems, and an increasingly important element of AI verification. But as cryptographic representations the growing share of the global economy and AI agents listen to a future where greater autonomy is gaining greater autonomy, the integrity of randomness, especially over financial operations – becomes existential, not merely technical concerns.

Myth of perfect randomness

Computer scientists are seeking the ideal version of randomness, embodied by the theoretical “random oracle.” This is a virtual black box that provides truly unpredictable output for each input. Unfortunately, complete randomness is virtually not achieved. Instead, digital systems rely on the pseudo-random feature of sophisticated algorithms designed to convincingly simulate randomness. Physical entropy sources such as CloudFlare’s “Entropy Wall” lava lamps and London’s unpredictable pendulums act as real-world seeds essential to these pseudo-random features, introducing true unpredictability from natural phenomena into the encryption process.

However, this blend of physical entropy and pseudo-random algorithms is not entirely possible. As MIT Computer Science professor Steve Ward points out, knowing the algorithm and its first seed allows for the prediction of random outcomes, as the next card was handled in online poker. These vulnerabilities highlight the important importance of truly unpredictable and verifiable randomness in technology-dependent contexts, from digital gaming to financial security.

Verifiable Randomness of AI

From healthcare diagnostics to financial decision-making, Artificial Intelligence systems increasingly rely on randomness to ensure fair, equitable and robust results, ensuring fair, equitable and robust results and play an integral role in a diverse range of applications. Randomity helps AI models to avoid overfitting by introducing the required variability in the training process, making predictions and decisions more adaptive and reflecting real scenarios. However, if randomness cannot be verified, it becomes impossible to ensure that the results generated by the AI are truly fair and resistant to hidden biases.

For example, consider an AI-driven financial transaction algorithm. These systems utilize randomness to investigate a variety of investment scenarios and prevent predictable exploitation. However, without transparent and verifiable randomness, financial institutions and regulators cannot ensure that model decisions are truly unbiased. The integrity of randomness directly affects market equity, as hidden biases can disproportionately support a particular asset or market participants.

Similarly, in generation AI applications such as language models, image generation, or personalized recommendations, a randomness parameter known as “temperature” affects it based on output quality. Low temperatures are consistent but produce potentially repetitive outputs, whereas higher temperatures are more variable, but present the risk of unpredictable and unreliable reactions. Without verifiable randomness, users and stakeholders cannot ensure that the charged temperature settings of the model accurately reflect actual operating conditions, namely creating secret bias and opportunities for subtle operation.

Furthermore, AI systems used in critical decision-making scenarios such as autonomous driving and medical diagnosis ensure that they produce unbiased results without bias. Verifiable randomness allows stakeholders to independently verify the fairness of these systems, significantly increasing public trust and regulatory compliance.

The importance of verifiable randomness functions (VRFs)

At its heart, verifiable randomness addresses the fundamental paradoxes of digital systems. Verifiable randomness rests on three pillars.

Unpredictability: Even the system creator or operator cannot predict the generated values in advance. Bias resistance: The output distribution does not contain detectable patterns or skews that may be exploited. Public Verifiability: Anyone can independently verify that random values were generated according to the specified protocol without requiring access to confidential information.

Public verifiability distinguishes between verifiable randomness and traditional random number generation. It bridges the necessary chaos of true randomness and the necessary transparency of trust. That may sound dramatic, but without that trust, insiders can rig AI algorithms and cryptographic platforms in their favour, lining up our civilizations in the technological dark ages.

Towards a distributed, verifiable randomness

Similarly, in blockchain systems, randomness underlies key features such as validator selection, transaction ordering, and token distribution. If Ethereum chooses a validator for block production, or if the NFT platform determines rare characteristic distributions, randomness determines billions of results. In manipulation, malicious actors can gain unfair advantages and undermine the entire industry.

“Stakes” (no pun intended) means that the demonstration system is particularly high, and the verification device is stochastically selected. If the verification device selection becomes predictable or operational, an attacker can corrupt the network with front-rotating blocks. Similarly, DEFI’s predictable randomness allows for flash loan attacks and market operations that emit liquidity pools.

The ideal solution combines true randomness with distributed verification. Distributes networks that produce collective randomness with a single entity not controlling the outcome, but anyone can verify its integrity.

Forward path: employs verifiable randomness

To enhance autonomy and responsibility for AI systems, verifiable randomness is not only a technical challenge, but also a fundamental requirement for a reliable system. Organizations developing AI agents should prioritize verifiable randomness before shipping their code.

The technology industry is at a crossroads. We can continue to build AI systems and offload more capital to cryptosystems with the unstable foundations of traditional randomness and opaque decision processes. Alternatively, you could employ verifiable randomness as part of your broader commitment to transparency and trust.

Without verifiable randomness, we are building our future in digital quick sands. Along with this, there are future conditions for prosperity where our technological superpowers work with us rather than against us.

Trusting Randomity Post: Why verifiable randomness is important for AI, Crypto, and distributed technology was first introduced in Cryptoslate.

crypto distributed important Randomness technology Verifiable
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Leslie
Leslie Stewart

Related Posts

Lydian launches Visa Platinum Crypto Card to enable everyday spending of digital assets

April 20, 2026

Goldman Sachs boosts Bitcoin ETF: Wall Street’s crypto grows

April 16, 2026

Circle and BlackRock lead growth as tokenized crypto U.S. Treasuries near $14 billion

April 13, 2026

Bitcoin price has not yet reached its bottom, crypto founder calls for “final dumping”

April 11, 2026
Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Popular Posts

Protesters attack and attack US consulate in Pakistan

March 1, 2026

Marjorie Taylor Greene speaks with Epstein victims at press conference

November 18, 2025

The fatal flaw in the Bitcoin debate is that it confuses value and utility.

July 1, 2007

UK GDP grew 0.5% in February, beating economists’ expectations

April 16, 2026
Latest Posts

Trump administration moves to ease regulations on medical marijuana

April 23, 2026

SK Hynix’s profits soar 5x on AI demand, strengthens NVIDIA’s supply chain

April 23, 2026

Iran’s economy in charts: hyperinflation and depreciation of the rial

April 23, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and stay updated with the latest news and exclusive offers.

About
About

At Cryptosphere Update, we are dedicated to bringing you in-depth coverage of the rapidly evolving crypto landscape, from market trends and emerging blockchain projects to regulatory developments and expert analysis. Our mission is to keep you informed and ahead of the curve in the ever-changing world of digital assets.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube
Don't Miss

Trump administration moves to ease regulations on medical marijuana

April 23, 2026

SK Hynix’s profits soar 5x on AI demand, strengthens NVIDIA’s supply chain

April 23, 2026

Iran’s economy in charts: hyperinflation and depreciation of the rial

April 23, 2026
Newsletter

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

© 2026 Cryptosphere Update. All Rights Reserved.
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.