Tether just opened its wallet to the open-source community, and it’s not asking for equity in return. The company behind the world’s dominant stablecoin launched a developer grants program on May 11 aimed at funding projects that build local-first AI tools and self-custodial payment infrastructure.
The pitch is straightforward: build something useful on Tether’s tech stack, get paid between $1,500 and $4,000 per deliverable, denominated in either USDT or Bitcoin. There’s no total payout cap on the program.
What Tether is actually building toward
The grants program targets projects built around QVAC, Tether’s platform for on-device AI inference. QVAC lets AI models run directly on your hardware instead of pinging a remote server every time you need a response.
The focus areas span core library development, documentation improvements, new application creation, and research into decentralization and edge AI.
Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino has framed the initiative around eliminating centralized dependencies entirely. His vision is a system where local infrastructure can manage and retain value autonomously, without relying on external providers for computation or custody.
The QVAC playbook is already in motion
On May 7, just four days before the grants announcement, Tether released QVAC MedPsy models. These are on-device AI systems designed for medical applications that deliver competitive performance against cloud-based alternatives, with one critical advantage: patient data never leaves the device.
The grants program extends this logic to payments. By funding self-custodial wallet infrastructure and related tools, Tether is trying to seed an ecosystem where stablecoin transactions don’t require intermediaries.
Why this matters for the broader market
For developers, the immediate appeal is obvious: get paid in USDT or Bitcoin to build open-source tools, no strings attached beyond delivering the agreed-upon work. The $1,500 to $4,000 range per deliverable isn’t life-changing money, but it’s enough to fund focused contributions from independent developers, particularly in regions where that sum represents meaningful income.
