Gensyn Launches Delphi: Decentralised Information Markets
Delphi is built on Gensyn’s decentralised AI rails. Once a market is live, no single centralised entity controls it, outcomes are settled by AI, with revenue distributed to the creator automatically via USDC.
Today, our decentralised AI infrastructure network, Gensyn, launched Delphi: the world’s first AI-powered information market.
For too long, creators and their communities have been constrained by centralised systems, seeing little upside or ownership. Delphi changes this by turning anyone into a market maker and audiences into information traders, bypassing the middlemen.
Truly open markets are a fundamental shift from the status quo. These are not prediction markets, they are information markets.
And the time is right for a new market structure.
Delphi sits at the convergence of three merging movements: the creator economy, prediction markets, and artificial intelligence. The global creator economy is valued at $250 billion in 2026, with over 207 million active creators worldwide. The projected value doubles in four years, to $500 billion by 2030.
Next, is the popularity of prediction markets, with major platforms like Polymarket and Kalshi hitting all-time highs, collectively processing billions in March alone. Prediction markets have quadrupled in the past two years, with reports predicting an annual market eclipsing $1.3 trillion.
But there’s much more to prediction markets than sports.
A prediction market is a world model priced in capital. Every trade updates a number that approximates the probability of a future state, and the economic pressure behind that number is what makes it worth anything. Traders with private information buy until the price reflects what they know. Arbitrage collapses inconsistent pricing across related claims. The cost of being wrong is paid in capital, not reputation.
What emerges is an approximation of the world that no survey, no model, and no committee can match on the narrow slice of questions it can price. That slice is narrow by construction: prediction markets currently only resolve on discrete, verifiable outcomes, which leaves most of what we would actually like to know unpriced.
The constraints of prediction markets
While prediction markets have exploded in recent years, these platforms are, by-design, centralised businesses. They get to decide which markets exist, how outcomes get called, and who gets to participate.
Creators, commentators and communities who actually build the audiences that fuel these platforms aren’t compensated. When a creator builds an audience around a niche topic, they’re creating a community with specialised, real-world knowledge.
This market is therefore more valuable because of this deep domain knowledge. Centralisation doesn’t just limit prediction markets; it limits what’s possible with the information that can be collected by them.
Beyond unfair economics, prediction markets pose risks as they rely on centralised entities to custody user funds, settle trades and resolve markets. These resemble the risks of centralised crypto exchanges like FTX, which can lead to abuse when unchecked.
Delphi solves this by removing the intermediary entirely and empowering users to create their own markets and custody their own funds. What Uniswap did for decentralised finance, Delphi will do for information markets.
A new kind of creator-centered market structure
Information markets are what prediction markets become when AI calls the outcomes, creators own the economics, and open infrastructure replaces the company that calls the shots.
Delphi is built on Gensyn’s decentralised AI rails. Once a market is live, no single centralised entity controls it, outcomes are settled by AI, with revenue distributed to the creator automatically via USDC.
In this new environment, creators can earn a low-maintenance revenue stream, while driving audience interaction and engagement. Participants are rewarded for their knowledge, rather than monetised for their attention.
Anyone can make a market on Delphi, which opens up the playing field for niche markets to exist that Polymarket and Kalshi would never think of.
Delphi is the first system built natively for both humans and AI, with settlement performed by verifiable intelligent oracles, not insiders. The end result is a feedback loop of information trading between humans and machines, with a clear target and incentive to accrue capital.
Put another way, we’re building a new engine for human-machine coevolution, and it only works if the infrastructure and all of the information are public and open.
It also opens up AI
Information markets open the economy. Current AI systems close it. AI can be a net good for people, but only if the infrastructure it runs on is open.
An information market is a venue where people trade on the value of what they know. Because that trading happens in public, any AI model can train on it. The effect is similar to what the internet did for publishing: the raw material of the future stops being owned and starts being available.
The future we want looks like this. AI models buy information from humans to get smarter. Humans get better forecasts because AI is trading alongside them. Knowledge compounds on both sides of the market, and the system behaves more like a public utility than a private platform.
That future starts today, with Delphi.
Launch your own market with Delphi. Join the wait list here to be one of the first to get verified.
For more information, please visit: https://delphi.fyi/
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Delphi is backed by industry-leading investors including a16z crypto, CoinFund, Galaxy Digital, Eden Block, Maven 11, and more. Since launching on testnet in December 2025, Delphi has recorded millions in test volume.