The Good Tech Companies - Why 0G Foundation Appointed Dr. Jonathan Chang to Lead Its Decentralized AI Push

Episode Date: September 30, 2025

This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/why-0g-foundation-appointed-dr-jonathan-chang-to-lead-its-decentralized-ai-push. 0G Foundati...on has appointed Dr. Jonathan Chang, former CEO of Heritage Singapore, to its board of directors to advance decentralized AI adoption globally. Check more stories related to tech-stories at: https://hackernoon.com/c/tech-stories. You can also check exclusive content about #og-foundation, #web3, #blockchain, #cryptocurrency, #dlt, #ai, #hiring, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @ishanpandey. Learn more about this writer by checking @ishanpandey's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. 0G Foundation has appointed Dr. Jonathan Chang, former CEO of Heritage Singapore, to its board of directors to advance decentralized AI adoption globally. Chang brings experience from fintech, education, and cultural sectors, along with connections to policymakers and academic institutions. His role focuses on positioning decentralized AI as a public good rather than a corporate-controlled technology.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This audio is presented by Hacker Noon, where anyone can learn anything about any technology. Why ZeroG Foundation appointed Dr. Jonathan Chong to lead its decentralized AI push by Ashan Pandi. Greater than can artificial intelligence be governed by everyone instead of a handful of greater than tech giants? That question sits at the heart of ZeroG Foundation's latest move to appoint Dr. Jonathan Chong to its board of directors. The appointment, announced September 30, positions a figure with experience spanning cultural institutions, fintech, and education to lead efforts in making decentralized AI accessible beyond crypto enthusiasts and blockchain developers. What decentralized AI actually means and why it matters. Before diving into Chang's appointment,
Starting point is 00:00:44 understanding decentralized AIIS essential. Traditional AI systems operate on centralized servers controlled by companies like OpenAI, Google, or Microsoft. These entities decide who can access the technology, how it gets used, and what data trains the models. Decentralized AI, DI, flips this model by distributing control across blockchain networks where no single entity holds power. Think of it like the difference between a traditional bank and Bitcoin. Banks control your money and can freeze your account. Bitcoin operates on a distributed network where transactions happen peer-to-peer without a central authority. Decentralized AI applies this same philosophy to artificial intelligence, distributing computation, storage, and decision-making across networks rather than
Starting point is 00:01:30 concentrating power in corporate data centers. The implications extend beyond technical architecture. Centralized AI raises concerns about bias in training data, lack of transparency in decision-making processes, and the concentration of power among a few companies. Decentralized AI promises transparency through verifiable computation, accessibility through open-source infrastructure, and democratic governance where communities rather than corporations set rules. The multifaceted background of Dr. Jonathan Chong, Dr. Chang's career path diverges from typical blockchain executives. His most recent role as CEO of Heritage Singapore put him at the helm of cultural institutions managing events like the Singapore Heritage Festival and
Starting point is 00:02:13 Singapore Night Festival, which draw millions of visitors annually. The position required building coalitions among government agencies, corporate sponsors, and communities takeholders. It demanded translating complex concepts into experiences that resonate with diverse audiences. These capabilities transfer directly to Chang's new mandate at ZeroG Foundation, working with policymakers, governments, and institutions to advance decentralized AI adoption. His experience navigating bureaucracies and creating large-scale public engagement provides skills that blockchain projects often like when attempting to reach beyond their existing communities. His earlier role as CEO of Fintopia Indonesia provides.
Starting point is 00:02:53 provides another relevant dimension. The microlending platform served millions of underbanked and unbanked individuals in Southeast Asia, addressing financial exclusion through technology. The experience connects to DI's promise of democratizing access to AI tools rather than keeping them locked behind corporate paywalls are requiring expensive infrastructure. Chang explained his priorities, greater than I'm excited to support Web3's largest decentralized AI operating system and greater than layer one ecosystem in its mission to make AI public good. 0G's infinitely greater than scalable infrastructure composed of an L1 modular blockchain, cost-efficient greater than storage, verifiable AI, generative agents, and a unified service marketplace,
Starting point is 00:03:36 greater than forms a thriving ecosystem that has secured over USD $350 million in committed greater than funding. He continued, my mandate is to work with policymakers, governments, and institutions worldwide to advance decentralized AI, while funding education Andre's search with universities to prepare for a fast-changing AI world. Breaking down this mandate reveals three focus areas. First, policy engagement means translating blockchain and AI concepts into frameworks that regulators and government officials can understand and support. Many policymakers remains keptical of crypto technologies after high-profile failures,
Starting point is 00:04:13 making education and relationship-building essential. Second, institutional partnerships could bring universities, research centers, and established organizations into the zero-g ecosystem. Chang's connections through Y Combinator, 500 startups, and his academic credentials from Harvard, Stanford, and the University of Pennsylvania position him to open doors that typically remain closed to blockchain projects. Third, education initiatives address a fundamental challenge. Developers and entrepreneurs need knowledge to build on decentralized AI infrastructure. Chang's doctorate in entrepreneurship education and policy from the University of Pennsylvania and his authorship of personal branding,
Starting point is 00:04:53 crafting your path to success, suggest he understands how to create learning pathways that translate into practical skills. The timing matters. Mainet launch and market context. Chang's appointment coincides with Zero G's Aristotle Maynett launch, which went live with support from validators, defy protocols, and developer platforms. The timing suggests coordination between technical infrastructure becoming production-ready and leadership arriving to drive adoption beyond the blockchain community. The crypto and AI sectors currently face a credibility gap. Despite billions in funding, many projects struggled to demonstrate real-world utility beyond speculation. Chang's background in cultural institutions, fintech serving gunderbank populations,
Starting point is 00:05:36 and education positions him to articulate use cases that matter to people outside the crypto bubble. Consider the difference between saying, we have verifiable AI on a modular blockchain versus we enable developers in emerging markets to build AI applications without needing to trust or pay big tech companies. The latter resonates with broader audiences and aligns with public policy goals around competition, accessibility, and innovation. Questions about public goods in governance. Positioning AI as a public good raises questions about governance and sustainability. Public goods in economics share two characteristics. They are non-excludable. You cannot prevent anyone from using them and non-rivalrous one person's use does not reduce availability for
Starting point is 00:06:19 others clean air and national defense fit this definition does decentralized AI the argument goes that open source AI infrastructure accessible to anyone without gatekeepers creates conditions for public good status however blockchain networks still require tokens for transactions computational resources cost money and technical knowledge creates barriers to entry these factors introduce excludability and potentially rival consumption, Chang's focus on education and institutional partnerships could address the C tensions by lowering barriers to entry and creating funding mechanisms that support public access. Universities conducting research on the platform, government agencies funding development of public interest applications, and educational programs training
Starting point is 00:07:03 developers from underrepresented communities could shift the balance toward true public good characteristics. Centralized versus decentralized AI. The appointment of occurs as debates intensify about AI governance. The European Union passed the AI Act regulating high-risk applications. The United States pursues voluntary commitments from major AI companies while considering legislation. China implements controls on AI development and deployment. Each approach assumes centralized entities that regulators can hold accountable. Decentralized AI complicates this regulatory landscape. Who gets held responsible when AI systems operate across distributed networks without clear corporate ownership. How do regulators enforce rules on open source
Starting point is 00:07:46 protocols where code gets deployed permissionlessly? These questions lack clear answers, making Chang's policy engagement role particularly relevant. His background navigating bureaucracies in heritage management and his experience with financial regulation through Fintopia could prove valuable in helping policymakers understand decentralized technologies without either dismissing them entirely or regulating them into irrelevance. The startup and education angle, Chang's connections to Y Combinator and 500 startups, along with his focus on education, point toward cultivating a developer ecosystem. Blockchain projects often struggle to attract builders with the skills to create applications people actually want to use. The gap between infrastructure and applications widens when
Starting point is 00:08:30 developers lack resources, mentorship, and examples of what to build. His role expanding opportunities for students, developers, and startups toll leverage 0G's open source stack addresses this gap. Successful examples might include programs similar to what Google for Education's next billion user initiative pursued during Chang's time there, which focused on emerging markets and underserved populations. The education component also matters for long-term sustainability, training the next generation of developers, researchers, and entrepreneurs to build on centralized AI infrastructure creates a talent pipeline that does not depend in a few experts. understanding the technology. Final thoughts. Dr. Jonathan Chang's appointment to Zero G Foundation's board
Starting point is 00:09:13 represents a bet that decentralized AI adoption requires more than technical infrastructure. It needs translation layers between blockchain developers and the institutions, policymakers, and educators who shape technology adoption at scale. His career trajectory, from Google Education to fintech serving the underbank to running cultural institutions, provides perspectives that pure blockchain or I experts might lack. Whether this translates into meaningful adoption of decentralized AI remains to be seen. Success will depend on execution, can change the actually open doors in government offices, secure university partnerships, and create educational pathways that produce builders. The appointment also reflects broader questions
Starting point is 00:09:55 about AI governance. A centralized AI companies accumulate power and regulators, struggled to keep pace with technological change, decentralized alternatives offer a different model. Whether that model proves viable, scalable, and actually serves the public goodwill shape not just OG's future but the broader conversation about who controls artificial intelligence and how it gets deployed in society. The real test comes not from announcements or credentials but from concrete results. Developers building on the platform, institutions partnering for real applications and policymakers crafting frameworks that enable rather thanstifle decentralized approaches. Chong inherits the challenge of moving decentralized AI from blockchain conference talking
Starting point is 00:10:36 points to genuine public infrastructure. Don't forget to like and share the story. Thank you for listening to this Hackernoon story, read by artificial intelligence. Visit Hackernoon.com to read, write, learn and publish.

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