From XION to Verona: The Network That Wants to Verify Everything
Formerly known as XION, Verona has quietly become one of crypto’s most revenue-generating projects — and with an $18.5M raise, $30M in brand spend, and the launch of EarnOS, it’s now making its biggest bet yet: that verified data is the missing layer the AI internet desperately needs.
There is a version of the blockchain story that ends with wallets, gas fees, and Discord NFT gates. Anthony Anzalone, Founder and CEO of Verona, has been trying to write a different one for years. The rebrand from XION to Verona — announced on June 17, 2026 alongside the launch of consumer app Ero and a combined $48.5M in new capital and brand commitments — is the clearest articulation yet of what that story actually looks like.
It looks like verification. Not the narrow, token-gate version that defined Web3’s early years, but something far more ambitious: a decentralized network capable of generating cryptographic proof for any piece of data on the internet, and making that proof programmable. If you understand why early DeFi mattered — the first time in history that ownership could be proven without a trusted intermediary — you understand why Anzalone believes Verona is building the next version of that same primitive, scaled to everything.
“We saw this with early DeFi: the only thing we could verify for the first time ever was ownership. Look at what happened with that. Now we can verify any arbitrary internet data. Just imagine where that’s going.”
— Anthony Anzalone, Founder & CEO, VeronaFrom Walletless Crypto to the Truth Layer
The journey from XION to Verona is not a pivot so much as a clarification. XION was built on a genuine insight: most people would never tolerate the friction of crypto wallets, seed phrases, and gas fees. The solution was to abstract all of it away — gasless, walletless blockchain infrastructure that mainstream developers could build on without asking their users to become crypto-literate.
That thesis held. But as the team pushed further, they kept running into the same wall. Crypto’s benefits are deeply entangled with speculation and financial value. Strip away the token mechanics and you’re left with one genuinely powerful primitive: the ability to prove something is true. Proof of ownership unlocked DeFi. Proof of arbitrary data, Anzalone argues, unlocks everything else.
The technical foundation for that proof already existed in zero-knowledge cryptography. ZK proofs allow one party to demonstrate that a statement is true — you earn above a certain threshold, you are a verified Uber rider, you hold a specific credential — without exposing the underlying data. Verona has been deploying this in enterprise contexts for over a year: income verification, employment verification, insurance, and real estate. The rebrand formalizes what those deployments have been pointing toward. The network is not a blockchain for financial transactions. It is a verification layer for the internet.
EarnOS, Ero, and the $30M Brand Spend
Verona’s consumer surface is EarnOS, a platform that turns verified behavioral data into a direct earning mechanism. The first application is Ero, which launched alongside the rebrand announcement. The concept is simple enough to explain in a sentence but structurally significant: brands pay users directly, in real money, for verified proof of their activity — and users choose whether to share that proof at all.
Anzalone walked through the mechanics during our conversation. Take a Lyft user considering a move to Uber. Under the current advertising model, Uber spends broadly, wastes massively, and has no way to verify whether a conversion was real or even reached the right person. Under the Ero model, Uber can offer a direct incentive — say, $100 — to verified Lyft riders. The rider’s Lyft history is proven cryptographically, never exposed as raw data. Uber gets a verified conversion. The user gets paid. No intermediary takes a cut on the data itself.
The $30M in brand spend backing this launch is not a marketing budget in the traditional sense. It is, effectively, a proof of concept at scale — money already committed by brand partners to pay users directly through Ero’s verification rails. That pool includes partnerships with Uber, Amazon, Nike, BMW, and more than 115 other global brands, drawn from a network that already has 69 million verified interactions across three million users.
Why This Moment Is the Right One
Timing matters in crypto, and Anzalone is candid that the rebrand is partly a function of where the AI landscape has arrived. For years, the verification use case existed without the demand signal that would make it urgent. AI has provided that signal.
The argument is straightforward: AI agents are becoming the primary interface through which people will interact with digital services — refilling prescriptions, applying for loans, booking travel, managing finances. To operate effectively, these agents need access to sensitive, accurate information. But there is currently no infrastructure that lets an agent access that information without either storing it insecurely, exposing it to third parties, or operating blind. Verona’s network is designed to fill exactly that gap.
The parallel Anzalone draws to early DeFi is instructive. DeFi proved that you could build an entirely new category of financial products the moment ownership became cryptographically verifiable. The bet Verona is making is that AI agents will unlock an equivalent category of services the moment personal data becomes verifiable without being exposed. The agent doesn’t need to see your bank statement to confirm you qualify for a loan. It needs proof that you qualify. Those are very different things.
“There’s no reason an AI agent should see your bank statement. It needs proof that you qualify — not the statement itself. We’re kind of this anti-AI AI play.”
— Anthony AnzaloneThe technical roadmap reflects this. Verona is developing an MCP server — a Model Context Protocol integration — that would allow AI agents to query verified data from the network on demand. A user sets permissions once. The agent accesses only what’s needed, cryptographically, without raw data ever leaving the user’s control. The infrastructure runs on Cosmos SDK, CometBFT, and CosmWasm, the same stack that powered XION, now oriented toward this agentic access layer.
Beyond Gas Fees — A New Revenue Thesis
One of the quieter but more significant aspects of the Verona story is its revenue model, which breaks from almost everything else in the crypto space. Most blockchain projects generate revenue through transaction fees — a percentage of economic activity flowing through the network. That works when the network is primarily financial. It does not work cleanly when the network’s primary product is information.
Verona’s answer is a revenue-share structure across all projects building on the network. Twelve projects currently operate under this model. Their combined revenue share is contributed to a token burn, creating a direct link between network activity — the verification of real-world data, the execution of brand campaigns, the onboarding of AI agents — and the value of the $VERONA token. The token itself is unchanged from the XION era; the rebrand is an alias change, not a migration, and existing holders are unaffected.
The significance of this model is that it does not depend on speculation or transaction volume to sustain itself. It depends on enterprises and brands finding value in verified data — a market that, by most estimates, already spends over a trillion dollars annually on advertising with deeply uncertain returns. If even a fraction of that spend migrates toward verified, programmable targeting, the network effects compound quickly.
What Verona Actually Means for Crypto Adoption
For those who have followed the XION story from the beginning, the Verona rebrand is the logical conclusion of a thesis that has been consistent since day one: real adoption does not happen when people choose to use crypto. It happens when people get value from systems that use crypto without knowing or caring that they do.
Ero is probably the clearest example of that thesis in practice. A user connects their data, completes a brand mission, earns $50 from Uber, and transfers it directly to their bank, Venmo, Cash App, or a freshly spun-up debit card. No wallet setup. No gas fees. No seed phrase. The entire experience is no different from any other earn-and-redeem app — except that the verification layer underneath it is cryptographic, the data stays with the user, and the brands are paying for something real rather than guessing at impressions.
Anzalone has been saying since 2015 that the moment for crypto would arrive when someone could buy a cup of coffee with it. By his account, and by the evidence of the Ero launch, that moment is now — not because crypto has finally become legible to ordinary people, but because ordinary people are finally getting value from it without being asked to understand it at all.
Whether Verona can scale that thesis to the full breadth of the AI agent economy remains to be seen. But the infrastructure is live, the brand partnerships are real, the revenue is measurable, and the timing — with AI adoption accelerating and verified data becoming a scarce resource — is as favorable as it has ever been. The rebrand from XION to Verona is not a fresh start. It is a declaration that the foundation was always pointing here.
Watch the full interview with Anthony Anzalone on Blockchain Interviews — Ashton Addison goes deep on ZK proofs, Ero, the MCP roadmap, and what’s next for the $VERONA token.
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