AISim
  • 1. Market Background
    • 1.1 Development Prospects
    • 1.2 Potential Challenges
  • 2. AISim: The World’s First Web3 IoE Network
    • 2.1 AIA Protocol (AISim Intelligent Access Protocol)
    • 2.2 Decentralized Identity Authentication (DID) System
    • 2.3 Distributed AI Acceleration Engine
    • 2.4 Intelligent Privacy Computing Module
    • 2.5 DeAI Client (Decentralized AI Client)
    • 2.6 IoE Data Management and Intelligent Caching System
  • 3. Technical Architecture
    • 3.1 AIA Protocol
      • 3.1.1 Protocol Adaptation Layer
      • 3.1.2 Distributed Task Scheduling Engine
      • 3.1.3 Decentralized Communication Network
      • 3.1.4 Cross-layer Data Encryption and Privacy Protection
      • 3.1.5 Dynamic Resource Scheduling and Optimization
    • 3.2 Distributed AI Acceleration
      • 3.2.1 Edge Node Computing Optimization
      • 3.2.2 Multi-Node Distributed Execution
      • 3.2.3 Privacy-Preserving Collaborative Training
    • 3.3 Decentralized Identity and Access Management
      • 3.3.1 Identity Verification and Access Level Grading
      • 3.3.2 Multi-level Data Protection
  • 4. Application Scenario
    • 4.1 Smart Healthcare and Health Management
    • 4.2 Autonomous Driving and Intelligent Transportation
    • 4.3 Agricultural Internet of Things and Precision Agriculture
    • 4.4 Industrial Automation and Intelligent Manufacturing
    • 4.5 Smart City and Public Services
    • 4.6 Edge Computing and Distributed AI
  • 5. IoE Web3 Ecosystem Construction
    • 5.1 DID Physical Nodes
      • 5.1.1 Types of Smart SIM Cards
      • 5.1.2 Rights of DID Physical Nodes
    • 5.2 MVNO Integration
    • 5.3 Ecosystem Incentives
  • 6. Tokenomics
    • 6.1 Token Distribution
    • 6.2 AST Token Use Cases
  • 7.Roadmap
Powered by GitBook
On this page
  1. 1. Market Background

1.2 Potential Challenges

Despite the great potential for development, the IoE market also faces some challenges:

  1. Data Security and Privacy

User data security and privacy issues are a significant concern in the current development of the Internet. Many IoT devices rely on cloud processing of data, and users have limited control over the ownership and privacy of their data. Strict data protection regulations in various countries (such as GDPR, CCPA, CSL) pose higher security requirements for IoE systems.

  1. Interoperability and Scalability

Devices from different manufacturers and technical standards are difficult to collaborate seamlessly, and the lack of unified standards and protocols limits the widespread application of IoE. In addition, with the rapid growth of the number of devices, traditional centralized systems face bottlenecks in resource networks and data processing.

  1. Demand for Intelligence

Simple device connections cannot meet the future needs of IoE. The introduction of AI Agents not only requires strong computing resources and data support but also poses higher requirements for the intelligence and real-time response capabilities of the network.

Previous1.1 Development ProspectsNext2. AISim: The World’s First Web3 IoE Network

Last updated 4 months ago