AntSeed has launched what it describes as the first peer-to-peer rival to OpenRouter, introducing an open marketplace for AI model access that removes the central aggregator from the middle of the transaction. The network is now live at antseed.com and is designed to connect AI consumers and providers directly, with no company acting as the gatekeeper for listings, routing, or payouts.
The launch comes at a time when demand for unified access to multiple AI models has grown rapidly, but so has the debate over who should control that access. Platforms such as OpenRouter have become popular because they simplify the process of connecting to different AI models through one interface. But AntSeed argues that the model still leaves too much power in the hands of a single intermediary. According to the company, its network changes that structure entirely by allowing buyers to discover providers directly, send requests peer-to-peer, and settle payments in USDC the moment a request is delivered.
In a statement, Shahaf Antwarg, Co-Founder of AntSeed, said, “OpenRouter and similar aggregators helped define the market for unified AI access, but that market does not need to remain centralized. AntSeed gives AI consumers and providers a direct, peer-to-peer alternative where access, reputation, and payments are coordinated by the network rather than a single platform.”
One of the biggest differences, according to AntSeed, is how the system handles discovery and trust. The network runs over the same peer-to-peer protocol that powers BitTorrent, which means it does not depend on a central server that can be taken offline. Every transaction, including payment, delivery, and provider reputation, is recorded on-chain. That gives providers portable public track records that cannot be erased or hidden by a platform, while also giving users a more transparent view of how each provider performs.
Built for Consumers, Providers, and Agents
AntSeed is also positioned as a tool for developers and businesses that already use familiar AI interfaces. The company says it uses the same API format as OpenAI and Anthropic, meaning tools such as Claude Code and Cursor can connect by changing a single setting. For users who are not technical, the network can be accessed through AntStation, AntSeed’s desktop client.
At launch, the network supports 20 providers, including frontier models such as GPT and Claude Opus, as well as open-source models including Kimi and GLM. AntSeed says it adds no platform markup to provider pricing, with users paying providers directly rather than through a centralized fee layer. That direct pricing structure is part of the company’s broader pitch that the network is intended to behave more like open infrastructure than a subscription platform.
Among the providers already available on the network is a Venice inference pool at diem.antseed.com . In that setup, DIEM holders stake their tokens into a smart contract on Base, and the pooled DIEM powers Venice AI inference across the AntSeed network. Users can access the provider through AntSeed and pay in USDC per request, while payments flow back to stakers in real time on-chain.
“DIEM was designed to make AI access something users can truly own, not rent,” said Erik Voorhees, Founder of Venice.ai. “Seeing it extended to a permissionless network like AntSeed is exactly the kind of open ecosystem we hoped DIEM would help unlock.”
The company’s design choices also appear aimed at a future where AI agents make purchases and transact on their own. With no accounts, no API keys, and direct-to-wallet USDC payments, AntSeed is built around the idea that autonomous agents should be able to use the network without relying on centralized authorization. That could make it especially relevant as agentic AI becomes a bigger part of the market, where software needs to interact, pay, and operate independently.
For now, AntSeed is pitching itself as more than just another AI access layer. It is framing the launch as an effort to change the structure of the market itself, replacing the traditional aggregator model with a peer-to-peer network that is open, permissionless, and harder to control from a single point. Whether that vision gains traction will depend on whether users, developers, and providers are ready to move beyond centralized intermediaries and embrace a fully distributed alternative.


