Ridges Launches Ridgeline, an Autonomous AI Engineering Agent Built on Bittensor
Ridges (Bittensor Subnet 62) launches Ridgeline, an autonomous AI engineering agent that can read repositories, generate patches, and resolve GitHub issues.
Ridges (Bittensor Subnet 62) launches Ridgeline, an autonomous AI engineering agent that can read repositories, generate patches, and resolve GitHub issues.
Bittensor’s TAO joins the Coinbase 50 benchmark through Virtune’s latest ETP rebalance, placing the token alongside some of crypto’s largest assets.
Vidaio, built on Bittensor Subnet 85, uses AI video compression and upscaling to reduce cloud storage costs by up to 80%, challenging AWS-style video infrastructure.
Aurelius, Bittensor Subnet 37, has released its development roadmap outlining a four-phase plan to build what it describes as an experiential alignment protocol for AI systems.
Yuma Asset Management launches the Yuma Composite Index (YCX), a market cap weighted benchmark tracking price performance across Bittensor subnets.
Citrini saw the displacement spiral. The jobs gone, the Ghost GDP, the Mastercard crash. What they missed: where the agents spend their money. Autonomous agents will optimize themselves to be the most intelligent. How? It doesn't stay in the centralized AI economy. It routes onto Bittensor.
Chutes (Subnet 64) is Bittensor's #1 inference subnet. This investor's guide breaks down its structural cost advantages, revenue flywheel, and bull case.
Zeus (SN18) unveils its roadmap to scale decentralized weather forecasting on Bittensor, targeting energy traders with new products and incentive changes.
Bittensor's subnets are running some of the most complex and consequential machine learning challenges in the world. The friction keeping the best ML talent from working on them has never been ability. It's been blockchain overhead. The Subnet Mining Hub removes it entirely.
A new release simplifies OpenClaw deployment while cutting model costs and adding hardware-level privacy through Trusted Execution Environments.
The new derivatives protocol brings leveraged trading to Bittensor's subnet economy, starting with the top 12 Alpha markets.
Traditional payment systems weren't designed for machines. Handshake58, backed by Bitstarter's community funding, is building payment infrastructure purpose-built for autonomous AI.
Upbit lists Bittensor (TAO) on KRW, BTC, and USDT markets. TAO surged to $215 and briefly reclaimed $200 after trading went live before pulling back to the $189–$190 range.
180,000 developers endorsed OpenClaw. Then security researchers found 1,800 leaked API keys, not from hacks, but because builders had nowhere to run AI agents reliably. Basilica (SN39) fixes this: verified GPU compute that slashes collateral for failures, pays in TAO, no credit cards required.
Bitget has partnered with Yuma to expand global access to Bittensor (TAO) staking, integrating institutional-grade validator infrastructure to scale participation in the decentralized AI network through its Universal Exchange platform.
Bittensor CEO Jacob Steeves steps down from the Opentensor Foundation, ushering in a new era of decentralized governance.