July 8, 2026
Voight Receives a Nosana Grant to Bring Verifiable Observability and Deployment to Onchain AI Agents
Nosana has awarded a grant to Voight, a platform building observability, identity, deployment, and discovery infrastructure for production AI agents on Solana. The collaboration will connect Voight’s agent monitoring stack with Nosana’s decentralized GPU network, making it easier for developers to deploy agents, understand how they behave in production, and give users greater visibility into the actions those agents perform.
As AI agents become more autonomous, they are increasingly able to call tools, interact with protocols, sign transactions, and make payments without requiring human approval for every individual action. This creates a practical challenge for both developers and users, because once an agent is operating in production, it can be difficult to understand what it did, why it made a particular decision, how much it spent, and which onchain actions were connected to that decision.
Voight is building an infrastructure layer designed to address these questions. Its platform captures agent decisions, tool calls, transactions, and payment activity in real time, then brings that data together in a way that can be reviewed, audited, and connected to the agent’s identity. With Nosana providing the decentralized compute layer, the integration is intended to create a more complete production workflow for teams building and operating autonomous agents.
Why production AI agents need a different kind of observability
Traditional observability tools were designed for software applications, APIs, and infrastructure systems. They can show whether a service is running, where errors occur, and how resources are being used, but autonomous agents introduce an additional level of complexity because they make decisions and take actions based on changing context.
For an agent that interacts with onchain systems, basic infrastructure monitoring is not enough. Developers also need to understand which tools the agent selected, what information influenced its decision, which transaction it signed, whether a payment was triggered, and how all of those steps relate to the compute resources the agent consumed.
Voight’s approach is to capture those actions as part of one continuous operational record. This gives development teams a clearer way to investigate unexpected behaviour, manage costs, respond to incidents, and review how an agent performed over time. It also gives users and protocols more information when deciding whether to trust an autonomous system with access to funds, permissions, or sensitive workflows.
By bringing agent observability together with identity, deployment, and discovery, Voight aims to reduce the number of separate systems that teams need to manage when moving an agent from development into production.
How Voight Will Integrate with Nosana
The integration will connect Voight’s agent infrastructure with Nosana’s decentralized GPU network. Agents already running on Nosana will be easier to identify and monitor through Voight, while developers will also be able to deploy new agents to Nosana directly from the Voight platform.
The goal is to give builders a simpler workflow for deploying, tracking, and presenting production agents without requiring them to manage several disconnected tools or rebuild their existing setup.
Connecting deployment, identity, payments, and discovery
The broader goal of the integration is to connect the main stages of a production agent’s lifecycle in one environment. An agent can be deployed on Nosana GPUs, monitored through Voight, connected to an onchain identity, registered for discovery, and displayed in a public explorer where its activity can be reviewed.
Voight is also bringing together Solana Name Service identities, its Agentic Registry, and support for x402 payment flows. This allows an agent to have a recognisable identity, a searchable public profile, and a record of the decisions and transactions it has made.
For builders, combining these components can reduce the complexity of managing several separate tools during deployment and operation. For users, it creates a clearer way to understand what an agent is, where it is running, and how it behaves once it begins interacting with onchain systems.
What the Nosana Grant Will Support
The grant will fund the technical work required to connect Voight with Nosana and move the integration toward wider use. It will also provide GPU resources for product testing, early deployments, and onboarding teams that want to run production agents on decentralized infrastructure.
The Development Roadmap
Voight’s longer-term roadmap extends beyond the initial integration. The team plans to broaden framework compatibility, improve governance and monitoring features, and continue developing the Agentic Registry as a discovery layer for production agents across the Solana ecosystem.
Supporting more reliable agent infrastructure
Voight is already live on Solana and working with real agent activity, so the grant is intended to accelerate an existing product rather than fund an early-stage concept. The immediate priority is to connect that product more deeply with Nosana and give developers a practical route from deployment to monitoring, identity, payments, and discovery.
As autonomous agents take on more responsibility, teams will need better ways to understand how those systems behave after launch. By combining Nosana’s decentralized GPU infrastructure with Voight’s observability and deployment tooling, the integration is designed to give developers more operational control and give users more context when interacting with onchain agents.
Build with Nosana
Voight is one of the projects using a Nosana grant to accelerate the development of practical AI infrastructure. The Nosana Grants Program supports builders creating AI applications, developer tools, agent infrastructure, and new use cases that can benefit from decentralized GPU compute.
Selected teams can receive GPU credits, ecosystem support, technical guidance, and co-marketing opportunities that help them test, launch, and scale their products on Nosana. The programme is open to builders with working projects as well as teams developing new ideas that can bring meaningful activity and innovation to the Nosana ecosystem.
Building an AI product, agent platform, developer tool, or infrastructure project that could benefit from decentralized GPU access? Apply for a Nosana Grant and take the next step toward bringing it into production.
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