MasterMindCritque

336 posts

MasterMindCritque banner
MasterMindCritque

MasterMindCritque

@MasterMindCrit

The Wise of Every Generation Discover The Same Truths

Bergabung Kasım 2023
509 Mengikuti66 Pengikut
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
Alex Hormozi
Alex Hormozi@AlexHormozi·
Losers becomes losers by being afraid of losing.
English
548
1.9K
13.4K
435.9K
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
Grayscale
Grayscale@Grayscale·
$TAO is entering the mainstream conversation @nvidia CEO Jensen Huang talking $TAO with @chamath on @theallinpod. FYI: Grayscale Bittensor Trust $GTAO is open for private placement for eligible accredited investors.
English
76
316
1.8K
173.1K
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
JJ
JJ@JosephJacks_·
Bittensor, folks. Bittensor. Choose freedom.
JJ tweet media
English
7
18
233
6.2K
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
Mastercard
Mastercard@Mastercard·
@chainlink The future of crypto in one tap 🙂‍↕️
English
121
487
3.8K
301.2K
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
Anthony Scaramucci
Anthony Scaramucci@Scaramucci·
Let me break something down for you. The Treasury will pay you back, but those dollars are worth less than the ones you lent them. That’s not a default. That’s a slow bleed. We are in a systemic crisis and the system is not going to fix itself. This is why gold is on a run. This is why Bitcoin exists. People aren’t chasing crypto because they’re gamblers. They’re searching for something outside the matrix — outside everything you and I learned in business school 30 years ago, because that playbook is obsolete. The money is being debased. The debt is unsustainable. And until Washington gets serious about reform, smart money is going to keep looking for the exit.
English
13
33
197
33.4K
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
NIOME
NIOME@NiomeAI·
SN55 is now live on Bittensor! NIOME trains decentralized models on synthetic genomic data to learn pharmacogenomic patterns. The goal is scalable, privacy-safe drug response through open AI networks 🧬 A DeScAI future is here. Join us! 🚀
GIF
English
5
7
53
3K
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
const
const@const_reborn·
@Jason Everyone should be mining subnets on Bittensor with agents.
English
21
29
363
24.9K
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
Jordan Crowder
Jordan Crowder@digijordan·
Computational visualization of an Atom…vs…the Human eye. As above, so below.
Jordan Crowder tweet mediaJordan Crowder tweet media
English
129
889
11.6K
328.5K
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
Dr Singularity
Dr Singularity@Dr_Singularity·
The near future (2030s) will be far more extraordinary than almost all people currently expect.
English
21
40
449
11.9K
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
Cozyreads
Cozyreads@Cozyreads_·
Cozyreads tweet media
ZXX
2
39
210
3.2K
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
Robert Greene
Robert Greene@RobertGreene·
Like a builder, develop the highest standards, and the patience for the step-by-step process.
English
73
212
1.4K
33.2K
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
Robert Greene
Robert Greene@RobertGreene·
What people say about themselves does not matter; people will say anything. Look at what they have done; deeds do not lie. You must also apply this logic to yourself. In looking back at a defeat, you must identify the things you could have done differently.
English
100
212
1.3K
28.6K
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
David Sinclair
David Sinclair@davidasinclair·
Biology punishes inconsistency
English
42
43
626
29.3K
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
sun runner
sun runner@0xSunRun·
Fair warning, about to get into the weeds here. But you flatter me, so I'll give you an organized brain dump (plus I've been enjoying writing my ideas out lately). In my mind TAO has two key innovations that set it apart, and once they click you'll understand why the "subnets over TAO" framing is a false choice. Some subnets will absolutely outperform. But TAO is going to do fantastically well regardless of which ones win. First: Yuma Consensus. The fundamental problem with "mining useful work" is that useful work is subjective. How do you get a decentralized consensus on which AI model gave the better answer? Which code actually works better? Yuma cracks it by recognizing that while any single quality judgment is subjective, patterns of agreement among independent judges are objective and measurable. It also recognized that not all the work has to be on-chain for verification (in this context, all that matters is the answer/output). Validators score outputs on a gradient, outliers get mathematically clipped, and the whole system is subject to economic selection pressure (bad judges lose money). Early skeptics of Bittensor considered this sacrilege given Proof of Work is an objective consensus mechanism where everyone shows their work, and a lot of their criticisms back then (i.e. it was rife for manipulation) were correct. But post-dTAO I personally think it's safe to say the skepticism is settled. The outputs speak for themselves. The DePIN subnets are humming, Ridges is competing with SOTA models on benchmark tests, Templar coordinated the world's largest decentralized training run (my three favorite examples but there are probably a dozen other things worth talking about here). Second: the tokenomic design. Crypto's promise has always been minimally extractive coordination (i.e. think coordinating drivers and ride-seekers without Uber extracting 30% for designing the marketplace on your phone app). But every decentralized network faces a chicken-and-egg problem: users won't pay for an underdeveloped network, and operators won't build without revenue. VC capital "solves" this but reintroduces the extraction crypto was supposed to eliminate (don't we all know this too well). Fair-launched native tokens solve the bootstrap without reintroducing extraction. But that only works if sufficient value eventually flows back to the token. This is where dTAO and TAO Flow come in. Every subnet has a protocol-native AMM pairing its alpha token against TAO. No other way in. Subnets that attract buying flow get more emissions. Subnets that don't, lose emissions and eventually get deregistered. This creates a direct incentive for subnets to (1) be good faith actors (i.e. don't try to farm/manipulate the system) and (2) generate real revenue and commit it to buybacks (rather than farm tokens and dump). If you don't, your subnet simply flounders and dies. Those buybacks mechanically create TAO demand because all alpha pairs against TAO. This is accretive yield. That doesn't even account for the fact that the best subnets earn an outsized portion of protocol emissions (which is a different form of yield entirely). Once you hit a certain scale that subnet alpha token is going to become an attractive investment on its own. Importantly, anyone who wants to join in and invest in that subnet to earn a piece of it will be required to first buy TAO off the market and then stake it (thereby locking up the supply) to hold the subnet token with its yield. So at bottom what you have is TAO functioning as the index for the entire subnet ecosystem. If any subnet is doing fantastically (real revenue and/or speculative investment) TAO is necessarily and mechanically pumping. All subnet tokens are essentially rehypothecated TAO (due to the way you stake to "buy" alpha) so every subnet benefits when one succeeds. Revenue buys back token → token appreciates → larger dollar value of emissions → bigger subsidies → attracts better miners and validators → better outputs → more revenue → cycle repeats. That's the flywheel underpinning the entire ecosystem. And here's the part I think most people haven't fully internalized yet. I genuinely believe Bittensor is a 0-to-1 moment in cryptoeconomic incentive design. The subnet architecture can be purpose-built for just about any idea you can conceive of (not just AI, although that's obviously the dominant focus given where the world is heading). If you have a good idea and a sound incentive mechanism, why would you go anywhere else? You get the lowest-friction path to insanely deep mining and liquidity pools that took years and over a billion dollars in emissions and four years to coalesce. If your idea works, you get massive subsidies immediately to bootstrap. Study the ascent of Ridges. Went from zero to 80%+ on SWE-Bench and a consumer product launch in less than a year. I'm pretty sure total emissions to that particular subnet are less than $10 million. How much have Cursor/Windsurf/Replit spent? And it fair launched. No premines, no VC insiders sitting on discounted tokens waiting for liquidity events. Everyone who holds TAO earned it through work. It's already more distributed than Bitcoin. The code is open source, anyone can fork it. But you cannot fork the mining pools, the validator set, the subnet composability, or the deep liquidity in the enshrined DEX. That's the moat, and I think it's impenetrable at this point.
English
29
75
399
75.3K
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
Canton Network
Canton Network@CantonNetwork·
Institutional settlement is defined by process. Conditions must be met before value moves. USDCx runs natively on Canton, with privacy, multi-party settlement, and 1:1 backing via Circle’s xReserve. Bridges move tokens. Infrastructure moves markets.
Send@Send

x.com/i/article/2024…

English
17
73
204
12.2K
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
Canton Network
Canton Network@CantonNetwork·
Winding down for the weekend. You didn’t need to see this.
English
18
46
258
14.7K
MasterMindCritque me-retweet
EthCC - Ethereum Community Conference
What if we could connect human consciousness directly through blockchain technology? Andreas Melhede (@AMelhede) explores this fascinating possibility in "How Elata Is Building the Internet of Brains on Ethereum" at the Built on Ethereum track. This could fundamentally change how we share knowledge and collaborate as a species.
EthCC - Ethereum Community Conference tweet media
English
1
4
13
763