Pi Network Launches Three New Products to Expand Beyond Mining App

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Pi Network just made its most ambitious move yet, and it has nothing to do with price. On Pi2Day 2026, the network launched three products that shift the entire conversation about what Pi actually is. Not a mining app, not a speculative token sitting in digital wallets waiting for a listing. A functioning infrastructure layer for AI, identity verification and distributed computing that is now available to businesses and developers outside the Pi ecosystem entirely.

Pi Is Now Selling Services to the Outside World

The most commercially significant launch is PiVerify, a KYC and identity verification service that external businesses can use to confirm their users are real humans. The infrastructure behind it has already verified more than 18 million Pioneers across 200 countries using a hybrid model that combines AI automation with human validation.

Fintech platforms, exchanges, Web3 services and AI applications facing fraud, fake accounts and Sybil attacks can now plug directly into that infrastructure. The twist that matters for Pi holders: third-party clients pay in Pi to use PiVerify.

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Your Computer Becomes a Node in an AI Network

SoloHost, the second major release, turns Pi’s existing network of over 420,000 Pioneer-operated computers into something entirely different from a blockchain validation network. Developers can now list self-hosted apps on Pi Desktop, including locally-run AI agents, and Pi Node operators can opt in to contribute their spare computing power to AI workloads from third-party clients. Those clients pay node operators in Pi for the computing work completed.

The first production app, launching shortly after Pi2Day, will allow the top 100 node operators to begin completing real AI compute tasks for external clients. Pi is not just building a blockchain. It is building a distributed AI computing layer from the bottom up, using hardware that 420,000 people already own and operate.

The first app demonstrating this is Hermes, a locally-run open-source AI agent that stores all data on the user’s own device rather than a remote server. In a world where AI data privacy concerns are accelerating, that is not a minor feature. It is the entire product proposition.

Sign In With Pi

The third release is Pi Sign-in, which allows supported third-party websites and apps to offer Pi accounts as a login option. It is the kind of infrastructure that sounds mundane until you consider the implication: Pi’s verified human identity layer, built across 18 million KYC-confirmed users in over 200 countries, is now available to any developer who wants to integrate it.

What It All Means

Pi2Day 2026 did not announce a price. It did not promise an exchange listing. It launched a KYC product that charges in Pi, a distributed computing network that pays in Pi and a sign-in system that connects Pi’s verified identity to the broader internet.

For a network that critics have spent years calling a glorified waiting room, that is a significant pivot toward something that looks increasingly like a real economy.

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