Revenue Search: Inside Bittensor Podcast By Mark Creaser and Siam Kidd cover art

Revenue Search: Inside Bittensor

Revenue Search: Inside Bittensor

By: Mark Creaser and Siam Kidd
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The podcast for anyone building, investing in, or obsessed with Bittensor. Hosted by Mark Creaser and Siam Kidd from DSV Fund, Revenue Search goes inside the subnets to ask the important questions about revenue - not just hype. If you’re betting on the future of distributed AI - or building it - this is your signal.Mark Creaser and Siam Kidd Economics Personal Finance
Episodes
  • Subnet Session with Jose from Yanez & Ken from BitMind: Subnet 54 and 34
    Apr 7 2026

    Revenue Search is back after the Bittensor San Francisco event, and this episode is a first: a dual-subnet session with Yanez (SN54) and BitMind (SN34). Jose and Ken announce a partnership aimed at tackling the rapidly growing threat of deepfake-driven identity fraud—the kind of attacks that can bypass KYC, liveness checks, and even enable high-value social engineering scams.


    In short: Yanez produces high-fidelity, well-annotated synthetic identity/face data and attack vectors, and BitMind uses that to train and improve face-focused deepfake detection models via their subnet. They’ll take the combined “data + detection” stack to enterprise customers (financial institutions and identity providers), typically via licensing/usage-based deals, with both teams reinforcing that real-world revenue supports their subnets (including alpha buybacks into treasury) while keeping flexibility for future DeFi/treasury use.

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    1 hr and 5 mins
  • Subnet Session with Seby from RESI: Subnet 46
    Mar 23 2026

    This episode starts with Siam and Mark chatting about TAO going “more mainstream,” name-dropping Jason Calacanis’ interest and sharing Const’s reminder that TAO/Bittensor ultimately stands on Bitcoin’s groundwork. They briefly recap recent ecosystem happenings (Bitstarter’s TAO Ads launch for Subnet 21 and their upcoming San Francisco trip), then bring on a returning guest from Resi (Subnet 46) to share a major product expansion.


    Seby explains RESI as a real-estate “oracle” network: miners produce and the team verifies highly accurate property valuation models (already available via Chutes for cheap inference). The big update is RESI Finance, a lending/tokenization layer built on top of that oracle. The core idea: instead of slow/expensive “tokenize your whole house” structures, RESI tokenizes liens/charges (mortgage-like claims) because they’re standard, easier legally, and safer. They claim they’ve reduced tokenization overhead from roughly $2,000 and weeks to about $200 and ~2 days, with the fee covering real-world checks (title verification, signatures/DocuSign, notary, and recording the lien) before any tokens can be minted.


    They compare the model to Figure HELOC (a large mortgage-backed stablecoin business): investors deposit USDC into a vault and receive a receipt token, while homeowners borrow against home equity; loans are later bundled/sold (MBS-style) and fees/interest create yield. RESI’s version mirrors this: investors deposit USDC and receive an “rUSD”-style receipt token with target yield; homeowners either (a) sell small slices of property exposure and/or (b) borrow against tokenized property collateral at lower rates (e.g., ~5%). The “looping” concept is using cheap borrowing against a yielding property to lever returns (e.g., reinvest borrowed funds to lift effective yield toward 20–30%+), with the oracle’s live pricing enabling liquidations/risk control.

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    56 mins
  • Talking Tao: with Mark & Siam
    Mar 9 2026

    This hosts-only “Revenue Search” episode is a casual catch-up where Siam and Mark answer live chat questions and discuss Bittensor’s bigger picture. They explain that accepting fiat for subnet services doesn’t bypass alpha value—fiat typically routes into TAO and then through liquidity pools—and that long-term alpha appreciation depends on each subnet’s “alphanomics,” mainly revenue-funded buybacks and/or getting miners to lock up alpha (with Chutes and Hippias cited as strong examples). They then talk about why they pitch Bittensor as “not really crypto” to newcomers (it uses blockchain as a coordination/resource-allocation layer for AI), compare Bittensor’s growth vs Bitcoin, and touch on rehypothecation risks as markets mature.

    They also cover TaoFlow and subnet churn (registration cadence, deregistration “relegation,” and why they don’t want more than 128 slots yet due to chain bloat and diluted incentives), plus investing views like TAO vs a broad basket of subnets depending on how active you plan to be. A major section focuses on agents: Siam describes building his OpenClaw agent (“Gordy”) with SOPs and tools, and they argue agents will increasingly discover and use Bittensor services. That leads into Handshake as an agent payment/provisioning layer with “providers” (APIs/services) and “skills” (prebuilt workflows), plus efforts to reduce friction like gas issues. They briefly touch on Astrid Arena (agents competing in trading challenges), OTC/Bitstarter deal-making and onboarding new talent, and wrap with a few quick audience questions and upcoming Bittensor social events (London, then San Francisco).

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    1 hr and 11 mins
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