Author:Momir,IOSG
TAO's bullish logic requires you to believe that a game theory miracle can happen. But the cryptocurrency industry has seen such miracles before.
Bittensor has one of the most elegant narratives in the cryptocurrency space: a decentralized AI intelligence market where market mechanisms allocate funds to the most impactful research. TAO is the coordination layer, subnets are the labs, and the market is the funding committee.
Strip away the narrative, and you'll find something more unsettling.
Bittensor is a funding program where cryptocurrency speculators fund AI R&D—and the funded have no obligation to return any value to TAO.
Think of TAO as Elon Musk—he was the first investor in OpenAI, a "non-profit" enterprise. Subnets are like Sam Altman—they are the builders who receive the funds, deliver the product, but have no contractual obligation to share the profits. They may ultimately choose to privatize the gains without returning any value to the original funding source.
Bittensor distributes TAO tokens to subnet operators and miners based on the price of the subnet token. Once a subnet receives TAO allocation, there is no enforcement mechanism requiring the AI models, datasets, or services it generates to remain within the Bittensor ecosystem. Subnet operators can farm Bittensor's TAO incentives and then take the real product elsewhere—to centralized cloud servers, package it as an independent API, or directly sell it as a SaaS product.
TAO has no equity, nor licensing contracts. The only binding factor is the subnet token—the token price must hold up to maintain access to resources. But this only works before the subnet "flies away": once the product is strong enough to stand on its own outside the Bittensor system, this tether breaks. The relationship between Bittensor and subnets is less like venture capital and more like research funding—you get startup capital, but they don't get your equity.
To put it bluntly, Bittensor is essentially a wealth transfer: from the pockets of token speculators to the accounts of AI researchers—or more directly, from the韭菜 (leeks/retail investors) to the tech-savvy "miners".
The mechanism is simple:
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TAO investors are footing the bill for the entire ecosystem. They buy and hold TAO, propping up the price, which itself is the pipeline for funds flowing into the subnet incentive system.
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Subnet operators receive TAO inflation rewards by "demonstrating performance"—but in reality, "demonstrating performance" largely means maintaining a good-looking price for their own subnet token.
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The AI products built with these funds can leave at any time—the only constraint is their continued need to access network resources.
This is a VC's worst nightmare: you provide the money, they build the product, but they owe you nothing. What remains is a token emission schedule and a prayer.
I. The Optimistic Interpretation
Now look at it from another angle. The optimistic view rests on two pillars:
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Persistent resource needs keep AI companies perpetually capital-starved. Compute, data, and talent are expensive. If Bittensor can reliably provide these resources at scale, subnets have a rational incentive to stay—not because they are locked in, but because leaving means losing the supply channel. There's a soft logic supporting this: AI's demand for resources is insatiable, and the scale TAO can provide is unattainable through independent financing. Following this logic, subnet teams will actively maintain their token valuation; no enforcement mechanism is needed, and the TAO economy can spontaneously form a positive flywheel.
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Cryptocurrency excels at resource aggregation. Bitcoin aggregated massive computing power solely through token rewards. Ethereum's Proof-of-Work was also a huge success, becoming a powerful magnet for computational resources. Bittensor is applying the same strategy to AI. The "enforcement mechanism" is the token game itself—as long as TAO has value, the incentive to participate will keep growing.
If you run 1000 simulations of Bittensor's future, the distribution of outcomes would be extremely skewed.
In most simulated scenarios, Bittensor remains a niche funding project. The AI outputs generated by subnets are insignificant. The best-performing subnets gain significant attention, capture the rewards, and then pivot to closed-source models, leaving no value for TAO. As token issuance outpaces value created, the TAO token depreciates.
In a few simulation paths, something actually works. A subnet creates a truly competitive AI service, and network effects start snowballing. TAO becomes the de facto coordination layer for decentralized AI infrastructure—not by enforcing capture, but through the gravitational pull of being the reserve asset of a functioning AI economy.
In a tiny handful of cases, TAO becomes a category-defining existence.
II. What Could Go Wrong
The bearish logic is simple:
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No stickiness. Once a subnet no longer needs TAO token incentives, it leaves. Bittensor is a transitional phase, not a final destination.
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Centralized AI holds overwhelming advantage. OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic have orders of magnitude more compute and talent. TAO cannot compete with the financial muscle of the venture capital and private equity markets. Therefore, the best talent will choose the traditional path.
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Inflation is a tax. TAO's emission schedule subsidizes subnets by diluting holders. If the value created by subnets doesn't justify this dilution, it's a slow bleed disguised as a "growth mechanism".
The optimistic scenario, frankly, seems more like wishful thinking than a viable path to success.
III. Conclusion
The majority of capital invested in TAO will ultimately subsidize development activities that do not return value to token holders. But Crypto has repeatedly proven that coordination games driven by token incentives can produce results that all rational models fail to predict. Bitcoin shouldn't have succeeded, but it did—though this argument alone is not sufficient, as the industry has also used it to back projects that couldn't withstand first-principles scrutiny.
The core issue with TAO is not whether an enforcement mechanism exists—it doesn't, and efforts like dTAO haven't changed that. The core issue is: are the game theory incentives strong enough to keep the highest quality subnets on board? Buying TAO is a bet that a "soft guarantee" can hold up in a harsh reality.
This is either naive or visionary.







