【Crypto World】Bittensor’s TAO experienced its first halving on December 15th — the daily issuance dropped directly from 7,200 to 3,600 tokens. For many supporters, this moment feels a bit like Bitcoin’s halving years ago, both striving toward scarcity and value anchoring.
The project’s ambitions are significant. Through the design of 128 dedicated subnets, Bittensor aims to decentralize the provision of AI services across the entire network, rather than concentrating in a few large companies. Using the “Proof of Intelligence” (PoE) mechanism, participants can theoretically earn rewards by contributing computing resources. Coupled with a total cap of 21 million TAO, the economic model indeed bears some resemblance to Bitcoin.
But reality is always a bit more complicated. Critics point out that Bittensor’s level of decentralization is still insufficient. Currently, the foundation mainly handles block verification, and power concentration remains an issue. In 2024, the network also experienced a hacking incident that caused a complete outage, exposing security vulnerabilities. This has led many to question: can this system really hold up?
However, supporters are not pessimistic. They believe Bittensor is on a path of “gradual decentralization,” similar to Ethereum’s evolution from centralization to PoS — not achieved overnight, but through continuous iteration and optimization. From this perspective, halving may just be a necessary step in the long-term evolution. The future development depends on whether the network can truly address issues of centralization and security.
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LiquidationWatcher
· 12-21 01:17
The halving is real, but how long have we been hearing this story of decentralization...
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SignatureAnxiety
· 12-19 05:26
Halving is just halving. The key is whether this decentralization really works or not. Who doesn't know how to say nice things?
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FOMOSapien
· 12-18 01:49
It's halved. TAO is trying to create scarcity this time, but when it comes to decentralization, I still feel it's all just talk.
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GasGrillMaster
· 12-18 01:39
Halving is just halving. When it comes to decentralization, you really can't judge only by the token issuance mechanism... After all the security vulnerabilities have been exposed, do you still dare to boast?
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CryptoMom
· 12-18 01:39
Has it halved? Then let's see if TAO can really take off, and not just be a paper article again.
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NFT_Therapy_Group
· 12-18 01:37
So what if the halving happened? Decentralization is still a joke.
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ChainDoctor
· 12-18 01:33
Has it halved? TAO is still somewhat interesting, but I haven't fully understood the centralized part. I think we need to see how things develop next.
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MidnightMEVeater
· 12-18 01:29
Halved? That's as naive as cutting a pizza in half and expecting guests not to notice—it's just a liquidity trap.
Decentralized? Laughable. It's just a miner tip harvesting machine disguised as a DEX.
Security has been breached several times, yet they still talk about gradual improvements. I've seen this script too many times.
Does TAO's scarcity come from famine or genuine demand? The midnight hours know best.
Another robot paradise self-hypnosis story. Arbitrage ranges will never deceive me.
Bittensor completes first halving: TAO's daily issuance slashed to 3,600 tokens. Where is decentralized AI headed?
【Crypto World】Bittensor’s TAO experienced its first halving on December 15th — the daily issuance dropped directly from 7,200 to 3,600 tokens. For many supporters, this moment feels a bit like Bitcoin’s halving years ago, both striving toward scarcity and value anchoring.
The project’s ambitions are significant. Through the design of 128 dedicated subnets, Bittensor aims to decentralize the provision of AI services across the entire network, rather than concentrating in a few large companies. Using the “Proof of Intelligence” (PoE) mechanism, participants can theoretically earn rewards by contributing computing resources. Coupled with a total cap of 21 million TAO, the economic model indeed bears some resemblance to Bitcoin.
But reality is always a bit more complicated. Critics point out that Bittensor’s level of decentralization is still insufficient. Currently, the foundation mainly handles block verification, and power concentration remains an issue. In 2024, the network also experienced a hacking incident that caused a complete outage, exposing security vulnerabilities. This has led many to question: can this system really hold up?
However, supporters are not pessimistic. They believe Bittensor is on a path of “gradual decentralization,” similar to Ethereum’s evolution from centralization to PoS — not achieved overnight, but through continuous iteration and optimization. From this perspective, halving may just be a necessary step in the long-term evolution. The future development depends on whether the network can truly address issues of centralization and security.