Jim Borger

142 posts

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Jim Borger

Jim Borger

@Web3JimmyB

CEO/Co-Fndr, @Web3Sense_ai: providing all stakeholders in web3/NFT communities analytics to better understand the value and behavior of communities and KOLs.

เข้าร่วม Şubat 2023
3.7K กำลังติดตาม584 ผู้ติดตาม
Jim Borger
Jim Borger@Web3JimmyB·
@walterkirn Will truly miss ATW. I know there were 'takes' but they were always done (1) in good faith and (2) with a sense of humor, which is all one can ask. Thanks Walter and Matt for so many great shows.
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Walter Kirn
Walter Kirn@walterkirn·
I didn't intend to end America This Week, suffice it to say. I'm sorry if that is the impression left by a confusing situation. I've had the time of my life doing the show and hold my friend Matt Taibbi in the highest esteem as one of the greatest journalists of our era. Truth.
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Jim Borger
Jim Borger@Web3JimmyB·
@ChrisKindaReads Always enjoy your posts. Brothers K is unmatched. Crime and Punishment is great, read it twice and did a self guided walking tour of some of the places Rashkolnikov walked when I was in St Petersburg. Think you’ll love that one too.
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Chris Fizer
Chris Fizer@ChrisKindaReads·
after reading Brothers Karamazov, i need to read everything dostoyevsky has ever written
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Robin τ
Robin τ@Robin_T100·
I’m bullish on #Bittensor for a reason most people still miss. What’s being built here is an intelligence market where incentives are aligned around usefulness, not headlines or raw compute spend. That distinction matters far more in 2026 than any short-term narrative. Centralized AI scales by hiring, capex, and closed teams. Bittensor scales by attracting global talent on demand. Open competition consistently outperforms static org charts. That advantage compounds, not linearly, but structurally. The strongest subnets already don’t behave like crypto experiments. They behave like early AI businesses solving real problems: fine-tuning, vision, detection, forecasting. By 2026, the best ones won’t even market to crypto, they’ll sell to industry. Liquidity, bridges, and subnet economics remove the last real friction. Capital becomes productive instead of locked. Builders stay longer. Participants rotate less. TAO turns from a speculative asset into working capital. Most people are still pricing Bittensor like a chain. That’s the mistake. If you price it like a permissionless intelligence economy that keeps absorbing real workloads, the upside isn’t driven by sentiment. It’s driven by adoption. That’s why I’m bullish on $TAO into 2026, not because it’s early, but because it’s becoming necessary.
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Jim Borger
Jim Borger@Web3JimmyB·
@GSchvey lays out a very interesting and digestible comparison of where Bittensor is the moment after its first halving vs. where Bitcoin was after its own in Nov 2012:
Greg Schvey@GSchvey

With the first Bittensor halving complete, I can’t help but recall Bitcoin’s first halving, which I was fortunate enough to witness.  History doesn’t repeat, but the rhymes are unmistakable; both the parallels and differences between the two are striking: Same: A Decentralized Alternative for Global Challenges Bitcoin launched during an unprecedented wave of central bank liquidity. By its 2012 halving, the Fed had tripled its balance sheet to $3 trillion, demonstrating how deeply monetary systems are tied to political interests. For many, this was the first time they questioned the foundations of money, who controlled it, and what these trends meant for the future. Meanwhile, in a fringe corner of the internet, a radically different idea was taking shape. Bitcoin’s halving showed that predetermined disinflation was possible, even as nation states inflated global money supply at a historic scale. Today, AI is expanding at an exponential rate, challenging entrenched industries and even our sense of humanity. This movement has been dominated by massive corporations - each with its own agenda - while governments scramble to regulate. And once again, in a fringe corner of the web, Bittensor offers a decentralized alternative: open competition driving AI infrastructure, training, and application without centralized control. Same: Technical Familiarity Remains a Hurdle Participating in Bitcoin in 2012 required technical knowledge. Public information was scarce, and understanding was predicated on familiarity with hash functions, peer-to-peer networking, and monetary plumbing. Most users still relied on the reference client and downloaded the full blockchain, as light clients and Coinbase had just emerged. Bittensor feels similar today. In addition to general crypto knowledge, understanding the network means having a grasp of AI infrastructure as well. Browser wallets exist, but the command line interface remains the most powerful way to interact with Tao and subnets. We’ve seen Bittensor investment funds recently launch and tooling is improving rapidly, but genuine understanding of the core fundamentals remains limited to relatively few. Same: Small Community with a Rising Tide Early Bitcoin was driven by cypherpunks, libertarians, and curious technologists - people motivated by ideals, not just profit. The small community was driven largely by personal relationships. People who would eventually become leaders of major companies (and serious competitors with one another) openly collaborated and shared ideas for the sake of the broader industry. After the 2012 halving, Bitcoin’s price surged 20x, attracting venture capitalists, megacorps, scammers, and the press. The core enthusiasts remained, and even grew, but signal became harder to find amid the noise. Bittensor is still in its heavy signal phase. While monetary opportunity exists – as it always did with Bitcoin - general uncertainty and technical complexity remains a hurdle for the general populace. Conviction about Bittensor’s potential impact remains a driving force for those currently involved, and it's still easy to reach leaders on X, Discord, conferences, and in commercial collaborations. There will never be a time as good as today to build relationships in this industry. Same: No Precedent for Valuation Bitcoin was completely novel at launch, making valuation nearly impossible. Was it a payment network? A store of value? A tool for buying drugs? In 2012, debates raged. Thirteen years and a 7,500x jump in value later, investment banks regularly publish Bitcoin research while sovereigns incorporate it into sophisticated strategies. Bittensor faces similar questions today. The network actively incentivizes productive outputs, but how does that translate to investment value? What is the relative value of Tao and subnet tokens? What makes a sustainable subnet? Answers will come through debate and experimentation, but for now, long-term valuation is yet to be clearly defined. Different: Crypto Plumbing Is Already Mature When buying Bitcoin in 2012, I had to hand cash to a convenience store clerk and punch numbers into a MoneyGram phone, hoping my account at Mt. Gox would be credited in the coming days. Bittensor benefits from more than a decade of crypto infrastructure - exchanges, companies, and regulations - enabling rapid capital flow when interest spikes. But this maturity also makes attention harder to capture. Crypto is vast now; garnering focus on distributed AI is far more challenging than when Bitcoin was the only game in town. Different: Risk Tolerance Has Changed Bitcoin thrived on its free, unregulated nature, both ideologically and practically. Today, institutional capital, regulatory frameworks, and existing reputations of people involved mean risk tolerance is far lower. Imagine the community reaction if something as "unsavory" as Silk Road appeared on a Bittensor subnet. Different: Diversity of Involved Parties Bitcoin’s early days were dominated by Austrian economists and cryptography wonks. Bittensor subnets have already attracted a far broader mix: scientists, cybercrime experts, quantitative traders, marketers, and graphics specialists, reflecting AI’s sweeping potential across industries. In 2012, Bitcoin offered an alternative to centralized money. As 2025 comes to a close, Bittensor is offering us an alternative to centralized intelligence. I assumed Bitcoin’s wild ride was a once-in-a-lifetime event. Now, as I approach my second first halving, I have a sense we just might get one more.

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Jim Borger
Jim Borger@Web3JimmyB·
@teddyfuse Jealous you’re in London at Christmastime, they do it right! The Dover sole at Holborn Dining Room (Rosewood hotel) is one of the best “homefield” dishes I’ve ever had.
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Teddy Fusaro
Teddy Fusaro@teddyfuse·
London’s Deli’s are a v underrated People who say the Brits don’t have good food are lost
Teddy Fusaro tweet mediaTeddy Fusaro tweet media
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Jim Borger
Jim Borger@Web3JimmyB·
@teddyfuse Not sure if you watched that performance he did in the town square in Bergamo during Covid but that was unforgettable too.
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Teddy Fusaro
Teddy Fusaro@teddyfuse·
@Web3JimmyB Agreed. I gave it a spin last night! Saw him at MSG a few years ago and felt the same way.
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Teddy Fusaro
Teddy Fusaro@teddyfuse·
Too soon ?
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Jim Borger
Jim Borger@Web3JimmyB·
@teddyfuse Connecticut’s own…Berlinetta Pilsner. Great tasting room in Bridgeport if you haven’t been.
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Teddy Fusaro
Teddy Fusaro@teddyfuse·
What are you guys drinking tonight ?
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Teddy Fusaro
Teddy Fusaro@teddyfuse·
“A king fortifies himself with a castle. A gentleman fortifies himself with a desk.” - Count Rostov, A Gentleman in Moscow
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Mark Jeffrey
Mark Jeffrey@markjeffrey·
That Hideous Strength
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Jim Borger
Jim Borger@Web3JimmyB·
@markjeffrey @markjeffrey between these posts and your interviews, you’ve added a ton of value to folks learning about Bittensor. Thanks! 🙏
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Mark Jeffrey
Mark Jeffrey@markjeffrey·
- And this also means that you would once again have "the same amount of TAO" in alpha tokens. You will NOT get chopped in half in TAO-terms (again, ideally, according to the design intent).
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Mark Jeffrey
Mark Jeffrey@markjeffrey·
Here's where I am at on this now: - TAO *and* alpha tokens INJECTED into liquidity pools are *both* halved. - ... so the ratio remains the same, hence halvening alone will not affect subnet alpha prices. - However. Subnet alpha emissions to miners & subnets do NOT halven. - This is good, as subnet alpha subsidies will not suddenly dry up (so miners keep making what they are now) - However, miners / owners / validators will now be selling at the same rate (probably) but into thinner liquidity. That MIGHT push subnet prices down. - However AGAIN, the first few BTC halvenings had the effect of 10x'ing the price of Bitcoin. - If TAO price merely 2x's post halvening, that should offset all effects of thinner liquidity. Open to comments / opinions on this, but that's what I see right now.
Mark Jeffrey@markjeffrey

Digging into the effects of the December 11th TAO halvening on subnets today. Specifically looking into 'unintended' effects of the design. There's never been a halvening with this specific design before, so we THINK we know what will happen, but nobody knows for SURE.

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Jim Borger
Jim Borger@Web3JimmyB·
@teddyfuse Facts. Seasweed snacks are also in the conversation.
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Teddy Fusaro
Teddy Fusaro@teddyfuse·
Goldfish are the worse snack to let your kids have in the car
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Jim Borger
Jim Borger@Web3JimmyB·
@batcountry1980 Amazing thread here, thanks for this. Will put on Young Americans today and look at it through a new lens.
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Raoul Duke
Raoul Duke@batcountry1980·
“Turn and face the strange” Young Americans remains David Bowie’s bravest, and least celebrated, reinvention, one that defied expectations and reshaped his legacy. Without its dive into “Plastic Soul”, Bowie’s evolutionary thread would have snapped, and his own Jenga tower comes crashing down. Far from a misfit, Across the Universe embodied his creative defiance, its lyrics mirroring his brave pursuit of The Muse. Like The Beatles, whose seamless transformations inspired him, Bowie was an agent of evolution, leaping into brave new worlds while weaving signposts into his work, something that continued throughout his career. And as Lennon was to him, he will go onto be an inspiration to generations of others as they follow The Muse and try to change their worlds, a visionary artist quite aware what they’re going through.
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Raoul Duke
Raoul Duke@batcountry1980·
Following The Muse Across the Universe: Bowie, Beatles and Bravery 🧵 “Oh, look out, you rock n rollers” Nestled on side two of his bravest album, David Bowie’s cover of Across The Universe has polarised fans since its release. To some, myself included, it’s a beguiling reworking of a Beatles classic; to others, it’s a creative misfire that disrupts Young Americans’ soulful groove. While debates over its quality are inevitable, the claim that it doesn’t belong on the album overlooks its reflection of Bowie’s creative defiance. With David Bowie, every choice is deliberate, executed like a chess grandmaster’s strategy. Why then did he choose to cover The Beatles at this pivotal moment, and why this song? To answer, we must first explore Young Americans as his most daring transformation, defying expectations for the first time, as before this leap, no one expected anything from him.
Raoul Duke tweet media
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