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DE
Dean Eigenmann@DeanEigenmann·1d

Outcome markets as a cover venue: HIP-4 and its traditional comparables

Dean argues outcome markets like HIP-4 function as cover venues where traders can hedge against protocol risks. He cites the April 19 Kelp DAO exploit that drained $292M from the rsETH bridge—roughly a fifth of circulating supply—as the largest DeFi exploit of 2024, illustrating why such hedging mechanisms matter for risk management in bridged assets.

0X
0xMedia@0xmediaco·1d

uPEG 与 Slonks 之后,Uniswap v4 Hook 终于被市场读懂了

Uniswap v4 Hooks transform AMM pools from fixed rules into programmable infrastructure, enabling pools to execute custom logic before and after swaps. 0xMedia highlights uPEG and Slonks as breakthrough examples: uPEG generates on-chain SVG unicorn images from swaps themselves, while Slonks uses a Hook as fee collector to fund buying and voiding NFTs tied to CryptoPunks, replacing opaque token taxes with pool-layer mechanics. The trade-off is that v4 Hooks eliminate safety by default—they can hide fees, enforce transfers, or contain malicious logic, requiring new market literacy to distinguish safe implementations from exploitative ones.

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PB
Pink Brains@PinkBrains_io·5d

HIP-4 Is Not a Prediction Market - It's the Options Layer: A Full Guide

Pink Brains explains that Hyperliquid's HIP-4, which launched May 2nd with a daily BTC binary as its first mainnet market, functions as an options layer rather than a prediction market. The distinction matters for understanding the protocol's architecture and trading mechanics, though the full implications require examining how this positioning affects $HYPE's ecosystem development.

NI
nikshep@nikshepsvn·6d

The Transformer Co-Author Quietly Built the Blockchain for AI Agents

Bull pitch on NEAR at $1.28 / $1.67B mcap, ~94% off ATH. The setup nobody is pricing in — vesting fully completed Oct 12 2025 (no more cliff unlocks; the 4-year supply overhang is gone), inflation halved 5%→2.5% Oct 30 2025 via protocol upgrade v81, 70% of fees burn permanently (with sufficient activity NEAR is structurally net deflationary), House of Stake/veNEAR governance went live.

Founder asymmetry: Illia Polosukhin is one of the eight co-authors of Attention Is All You Need — the Transformer paper that powers GPT-4/Claude/Gemini/Llama. Co-founder Alex Skidanov was Engineer #1 at MemSQL, a two-time ICPC World Finals medalist, designed the only sharded distributed DB that worked at scale. The market is currently valuing their company at less than the seed-round valuation of half the AI agent startups in San Francisco.

Real thesis: agents can't use Visa. When autonomous agents replace humans as users, the entire payment stack breaks — weekend bank hours, KYC for every counterparty, days-to-settle, not programmable. NEAR has shipped more agent-native infrastructure than any L1 competitor:

  • Nightshade 2.0 sharding — 600ms blocks, 1.2s finality, $0.0019 avg fee, benchmarked at 1M+ TPS across 70 shards.
  • Chain Signatures — one NEAR account derives addresses on Bitcoin/Ethereum/Solana/Cosmos/XRP/Aptos/Sui via MPC threshold-signing. Native multichain control from a single account. No wrapped tokens, no bridge honeypots.
  • OmniBridge — settlement minutes vs hours.
  • NEAR Intents — $3M→$13B cumulative cross-chain volume in 2025 (a 200,000%+ jump). Fee switch now active. Ledger, Sui, Starknet integrated.
  • Confidential Intents (Feb 2026) — TEE-isolated private shard parallel to mainnet. No client-side ZK (UX killer for every privacy chain). MEV protection. Selective compliance disclosure.
  • IronClaw — open-source verifiable agent runtime in encrypted TEE. WASM sandbox per tool, AES-256-GCM credential vault, multi-LLM backend, MCP plugin support.

Catalysts: Bitwise + Grayscale spot ETF filings (Grayscale to convert GTAO Trust on NYSE Arca with Coinbase Custody), NVIDIA Inception membership, Brave private-inference partnership, fee switch revenue.

Honest bear case: $117M TVL is small (RHEA Finance is concentration risk). Governance controversy — Chorus One opposed the inflation halving as forced through despite a failed initial governance vote. Memecoin overhang on AI/crypto narrative. Execution risk vs Solana's deeper liquidity and consumer DeFi. ETF filings ≠ approvals.

Asymmetry: at $1.67B with vesting done, halved inflation, fee burn, ETF filings in flight, $13B+ routed cross-chain volume, transformer co-author at the helm — downside bounded by L1 floor, upside multi-X if the agent thesis lands.

CT
Cameron Tao@quack_builder·7d

Bittensor 是 AI 时代的比特币吗?— 译 Jacob 在清华大学的演讲

Translation + commentary on Bittensor founder Jacob Steeves's Tsinghua University talk. Cameron walks through Jacob's framing of "incentive computing" as the universal pattern behind both Bitcoin and AI. Five-step argument:

(1) One pattern underlies every powerful adaptive system: state · objective · feedback · adaptation · loop. AlexNet 2012 broke MNIST not by hand-coding what digits look like, but by letting the network self-adapt to a target. The same loop describes RL, genetic algorithms, slime molds finding shortest paths through mazes, river deltas, the structure of leaf veins.

(2) Bitcoin is the first production-scale implementation of this pattern — not as money, but as a self-adaptive computer that produces hashes. The numbers are absurd: 1000x the compute of America's six largest cloud providers combined, 10²¹ hashes/sec, 23GW continuous power (Thailand-scale). 700-9000x more efficient at producing hashes than centralized cloud — because it's borderless, always-on, autonomous, and permissionless. Bitcoin is the world's largest supercomputer, optimized purely for hash production.

(3) Incentive computing generalizes the pattern by replacing "reward = a number in a computer" with real money. ML's reward signal can't pay 200 countries' worth of contributors; Bitcoin's can — that's why the entire planet became a mining network. But hashes are useless outside Bitcoin. The question is whether the same mechanism can mint anything.

(4) Bittensor is the generic version — replace "miners produce hashes" with "miners produce any useful work": storage, compute, ML models, gradients, data, robotics. Validators score, network mints. PyTorch for incentive computing.

(5) Five proven examples already running on Bittensor:

  • SN62 Ridges (SWE-Bench coding agents) — top miner makes $60K/day. The agent that beat Claude/OpenAI on SWE-Bench was 7,000 lines written by an unknown person. "An AI lab with no engineers — it doesn't define how to solve the problem, it only defines the incentive."
  • SN3 τemplar (cross-internet collaborative pre-training) — successfully trained a 70B-parameter model across the open internet. Has never been done before. Cameron notes the founder later "ran away" — full piece coming.
  • GPU markets (SN51 Lium, SN4 Targon) — borderless permissionless GPU rental → world's lowest GPU prices.
  • SN64 Chutes (open-source inference) — #1 open-source provider on OpenRouter, 9.1T tokens. Briefly served more DeepSeek queries than DeepSeek itself.
  • Robotics + long tail — drone simulation, US stock signals, sports betting, drug discovery, weather forecasting, quantum compute, commodity trading.

dTAO (live since Feb 2025) makes the network self-referential — subnets compete in capital markets for emission allocation. The market itself decides which incentive mechanisms get the next round of TAO.

The deeper point: AI is being captured by a tiny number of closed labs (OpenAI, ~3K employees, you'll never own any of it, your data goes who knows where). Incentive computing distributes ownership and makes the rules visible. Anyone can enter, contribute, and own a piece — even if Bittensor isn't the project that wins, the shape of the AI economy will change because of this idea.

AT
Alex Thorn@intangiblecoins·8d

Proposal to Make XXI No. 2 BTC DAT

Tether Investments, XXI's majority shareholder, proposed merging Twenty One Capital (NYSE: XXI) with Jack Mallers' Strike, then with Raphael Zagury's Elektron Energy (~50 EH/s, ~5% of network hashrate, all-in <$60K/BTC). Combined entity: 43,514 BTC treasury, 50 EH/s mining, 100+ country financial-services distribution, $2.1B Tether-funded Bitcoin-backed lending facility. Mallers stays CEO, Zagury proposed as President. Announced at Bitcoin 2026 keynote — same slot Mallers used for the El Salvador legal-tender announcement in 2021.

Strategic read (Galaxy's): the pure-play DAT trade is dead. Most DATs (including Strategy at times) now trade ≤1.0x mNAV; XXI listed at $10 PIPE in Dec, has drifted lower. Controlling shareholders are converting treasury vehicles into operating companies that can generate cash flow and justify a multiple on something other than BTC-per-share growth. Mining + financial services are the two highest-cashflow Bitcoin-only verticals, so XXI is targeting the right surfaces first.

Bigger picture: this is Tether's onshoring vehicle into US public markets. Tether now controls 140K+ BTC, USDT circulation hit ~$189B, and most of that operating empire has been opaque, El Salvador-domiciled, outside US securities reach. Rolling Strike + Elektron into NYSE-listed XXI migrates significant pieces onshore into a regulated, audited, US-reporting structure. If executed, this is arguably the most strategically significant publicly-traded Bitcoin-only company outside Strategy — and unlike Strategy, it has real operating cash flow alongside the treasury. Governance complications: Mallers is on both sides of Strike, Tether on both sides of Elektron — special committee, fairness opinions, and majority-of-the-minority vote needed. Zagury is also a central figure in pending Swan/Tether litigation.