Bittensor pays roughly eight dollars in TAO token emissions for every dollar of real AI revenue that flows through the network. The exact ratio fluctuates by quarter, but the shape is durable. Q1 2026: about $328 million in annual emissions against $43 million in real AI revenue. That is 7.6 to 1. It is what the crypto-skeptical press has called "extractive by default." It is also what the crypto-friendly analysts call "the subsidy treadmill."

The Bittensor engineering team is sophisticated. The subnet validators run real ML evaluation. The miners serve real inference. The revenue is real. The emissions are also real.

The cause is the token model itself. One asset is asked to do two jobs that do not belong together. I want to be specific about this part, because every other decentralized AI compute network I have looked at has the same problem, and the fix is well-known.

What the token does

A token in a decentralized AI compute network does two structurally distinct things.