Futures
Hundreds of contracts settled in USDT or BTC
TradFi
Gold
Trade global traditional assets with USDT in one place
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Futures Kickoff
Get prepared for your futures trading
Futures Events
Participate in events to win generous rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to experience risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and enjoy airdrop rewards!
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
Investment
Simple Earn
Earn interests with idle tokens
Auto-Invest
Auto-invest on a regular basis
Dual Investment
Buy low and sell high to take profits from price fluctuations
Soft Staking
Earn rewards with flexible staking
Crypto Loan
0 Fees
Pledge one crypto to borrow another
Lending Center
One-stop lending hub
VIP Wealth Hub
Customized wealth management empowers your assets growth
Private Wealth Management
Customized asset management to grow your digital assets
Quant Fund
Top asset management team helps you profit without hassle
Staking
Stake cryptos to earn in PoS products
Smart Leverage
New
No forced liquidation before maturity, worry-free leveraged gains
GUSD Minting
Use USDT/USDC to mint GUSD for treasury-level yields
Governing Machine Learning Models in Business: Why ModelOps Is Essential
To deliver lasting value, businesses must continuously monitor, manage, and improve these models. This is where ModelOps—the practice of governing the full lifecycle of AI models—plays a critical role.
Why Model Governance Matters
Once in production, ML models impact decisions that drive operations, influence customer experiences, and affect financial outcomes. Without governance, these models can drift, fail silently, or produce inaccurate results. Poor oversight can result in regulatory non-compliance, inefficiency, and reputational risk. Model governance ensures models are reliable, accountable, and aligned with business goals.
The Four Perspectives of Model Monitoring
Data Science Perspective
Data scientists monitor for drift—a sign that input data has changed significantly from training data. Drift can lead to poor model predictions and must be detected early to retrain or replace models as needed.
Operational Perspective
IT teams track system metrics such as CPU usage, memory, and network load. Key indicators include latency(delay in processing) and throughput (volume of data processed). These metrics help maintain performance and efficiency.
Cost Perspective
Measuring records processed per second is not enough. Businesses should monitor records per second per cost unit to assess return on investment. This helps determine if a model continues to deliver business value.
Service Perspective
Service Level Agreements (SLAs) must be defined for analytic workflows. These include time to deploy, retrain, or respond to performance issues. Meeting SLAs ensures reliability and stakeholder satisfaction.
The Rise of ModelOps
ModelOps extends beyond machine learning operationalization (MLOps). It governs the entire lifecycle of all AI models—ML, rules-based, optimization, natural language, and others. According to Gartner, ModelOps is central to scaling AI in the enterprise. It enables:
FINRA Case Study: Governance in Action
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) offers a real-world example of model governance at scale. FINRA processes over 600 billion transactions daily. With responsibility for regulating 3,300 securities firms and over 620,000 brokers, governance is crucial.
Key practices at FINRA include:
Their approach emphasizes that governance is not an afterthought—it begins with project initiation and continues through post-deployment monitoring.
Enabling ModelOps with Technology
AI governance platforms like ModelOp Center help organizations operationalize governance. These tools integrate with existing development environments, IT systems, and business applications to manage the entire AI lifecycle.
With ModelOp Center, businesses can:
These outcomes are possible through end-to-end orchestration, automated monitoring, and unified visibility into all models.
Conclusion: Start Early, Scale Smart
To unlock the full value of AI, organizations must treat ModelOps as a core business function. This means creating clear roles, building cross-functional workflows, and implementing tools to monitor, test, and scale models responsibly. As with DevOps and SecOps, ModelOps is becoming essential for digital maturity.
Companies that invest in governance from the start gain competitive advantage by reducing risk, improving decision accuracy, and accelerating innovation.