AI tool comparison
Claude Files API vs Tether QVAC SDK
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
Claude Files API
Persistent file storage for Claude API — upload once, reference forever
100%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Anthropic's Files API allows developers to upload documents once and reference them persistently across multiple Claude API calls, eliminating redundant token costs from re-sending large context. The feature targets enterprise RAG pipelines and agentic workflows where the same documents are queried repeatedly. Currently in public beta, it addresses a real pain point in production LLM systems where context window management drives both latency and cost.
Developer Tools
Tether QVAC SDK
Build local-first AI agents that run offline on any device — no cloud needed
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
Tether — yes, the stablecoin company — has launched QVAC, a fully open-source SDK for building on-device AI agents that work offline, peer-to-peer, and without any dependency on centralized cloud infrastructure. Built on a customized fork of llama.cpp called QVAC Fabric, it supports text completion, embeddings, vision, OCR, speech-to-text, text-to-speech, and translation — all running locally on Linux, macOS, Windows, Android, and iOS with a single unified API. What makes QVAC architecturally distinct is the Holepunch protocol stack underneath it: models can be distributed peer-to-peer, inference can be delegated across devices without centralized infrastructure, and the roadmap includes decentralized swarms for training and fine-tuning. Once a model is cached locally, the SDK works fully offline — making it suitable for air-gapped deployments, field work, and restricted-network environments. Tether is also running a developer grants program to fund projects building with QVAC, specifically targeting local-first AI and payment applications. With $27B+ in stablecoin reserves behind it, Tether has the runway to sustain a multi-year open-source effort here — which is more than most AI SDK projects can say.
Reviewer scorecard
“The primitive here is clean: persistent file references that decouple document upload from inference calls, so you stop paying context tokens on every round-trip for the same PDF. The DX bet is that a file ID is the right abstraction — upload once, get a handle, pass the handle. That's correct. The moment of truth is a developer who's been stuffing the same 200-page knowledge base into every call: this immediately cuts their token bill and latency without touching their downstream logic. It's not a weekend script replacement — building reliable file lifecycle management, chunking behavior, and cross-session persistence correctly is exactly the kind of boring infrastructure that Anthropic is right to own. The specific decision that earns the ship: file references are a first-class API primitive, not a feature flag buried in a system prompt config.”
“A single API covering text, vision, speech, OCR, and translation — locally, cross-platform, offline — built on llama.cpp with P2P model distribution via Holepunch. This is the toolkit for building genuinely private AI apps, especially on mobile where on-device inference is finally practical.”
“Direct competitor is OpenAI's file storage via Assistants API and vector store attachments — Anthropic is playing catch-up here, not pioneering. The scenario where this breaks is multi-tenant SaaS: when file namespacing, per-user quotas, and deletion guarantees become product requirements, 'beta' storage semantics are a liability in front of enterprise procurement. What kills this in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's Anthropic shipping this as a footnote to a larger context window expansion that makes persistent storage less necessary. But right now, for a solo developer running an agentic pipeline with recurring documents, it solves a real billing and latency problem that previously required rolling your own S3 caching layer. Ship — with the caveat that any production use needs to watch the beta SLA like a hawk.”
“Tether's business is stablecoins, and grafting a major open-source AI SDK onto that brand is an unusual strategic move that raises questions about long-term commitment. The Holepunch P2P stack is powerful but adds significant complexity — most developers just want a simple local inference wrapper, not a decentralized agent protocol.”
“The buyer is the enterprise engineering team with a Claude API contract, and this comes out of their existing infrastructure budget — no new line item, no new procurement cycle. The pricing architecture is sensible: Anthropic captures the storage margin while reducing per-call token costs, which actually makes Claude stickier by improving customer unit economics on high-frequency document workflows. The moat is workflow lock-in: once a company's document IDs and file lifecycle are managed through Anthropic's API, switching to a competitor means re-uploading and re-indexing everything — that's real friction. The stress test is straightforward: if context windows hit 10M tokens and become cheap enough that re-sending doesn't matter, this feature becomes irrelevant. The specific business decision that makes this viable is that it reduces churn risk on high-volume customers by lowering their per-query cost, which aligns Anthropic's infrastructure investment directly with retention.”
“The thesis this bets on: agentic pipelines in 2-3 years will be long-running processes that accumulate and reference institutional documents across hundreds of sessions, not single-shot queries. For that to be true, file identity — not just file content — needs to be a stable primitive that survives across agent runs. The dependency that has to hold is that agents don't collapse back into stateless chatbots; the dependency that can't happen is that context windows become so cheap and large that storage is irrelevant. The second-order effect if this wins is significant: Anthropic becomes the memory layer for enterprise agentic workflows, not just the inference layer — that's a platform position, not a feature. This tool is on-time to the trend of stateful AI infrastructure; the specific future state where this is infrastructure is a world where a company's Claude file IDs are as operationally critical as their S3 bucket names.”
“QVAC represents the counter-narrative to cloud AI monopolization: intelligence that lives on devices, syncs peer-to-peer, and never phones home. Combined with Tether's payment rails, this could be the foundation for AI agents that transact autonomously in a fully decentralized stack.”
“Local speech-to-text, translation, and OCR with one SDK, working offline on my phone? The creative use cases — offline transcription in the field, private on-device captioning, local image analysis — are immediately compelling without needing to trust a cloud provider with my content.”
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