Zinger Key Points
- David Johnston says Forge tools are open-source, allowing anyone to build agents easily.
- Morpheus paid $1 million in MOR tokens to AI builders from January to February.
- Pelosi’s latest AI pick skyrocketed 169% in just one month. Click here to discover the next stock our government trade tracker is spotlighting—before it takes off.
Morpheus, a platform focused on decentralized AI infrastructure, on Thursday announced the launch of "Forge," a tool repository designed to help developers and enterprises build and manage AI-powered smart agents without writing code.
According to the company, Forge offers open-source and decentralized tools that enable users to deploy agents for a variety of use cases, including automation, personal assistance, and governance tasks.
The platform combines machine learning, automation, and natural language processing to support agent creation.
"All tools in the Forge are open source and/or decentralized so that anyone wishing to build a truly open source and decentralized agent can do so," said David Johnston, an early contributor to Morpheus. "They don't even need to know how to code."
Morpheus' announcement follows significant traction from its AI builder rewards program.
Between Jan. 15 and Feb. 15, the platform awarded developers over $1 million in MOR tokens.
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The initiative is part of a broader $10 million incentive pool aimed at growing its decentralized AI ecosystem.
"With Forge, we are democratizing access to the most transformative technology of our lifetime," Johnston added. "We can't have a situation where a select few profit immensely from AI while keeping the rest in the dark."
Morpheus is built on four contribution pillars: code, capital, compute, and builders. Its native token, MOR, is used for network transactions and reward distribution.
According to the company, MOR currently has over 5,000 holders and is available for trading on Aerodrome, Uniswap, and CoinEx.
The company's broader AI platform offers features such as a ChatGPT-style interface, crypto payments for services, and AI image generation through multiple large language models.
AI services are powered by distributed compute providers and accessed through a permissionless system.
Scott Berenzweig, another early contributor to Morpheus, credited the development of Forge in part to contributions from Shiza.ai, known for building no-code AI tools.
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