Bittensor (TAO) Surges 28% As Nvidia CEO Huang Praises Open AI Models
The post Bittensor (TAO) Surges 28% As Nvidia CEO Huang Praises Open AI Models appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Bittensor’s TAO ripped higher on Thursday and topped in early European trading on Friday after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang highlighted the project on the All-In podcast, pushing the token from $243.5 to $310.6 before it cooled to $298.1 by press time. The move put one of crypto’s most closely watched AI-linked assets back in focus, not because Huang endorsed the token directly, but because he treated the underlying technical milestone as meaningful in a much bigger debate over open AI infrastructure. The moment came when Chamath Palihapitiya pointed Huang to what he called a “pretty crazy technical accomplishment” inside “this crypto project called Bittensor.” He described a recent training run on Subnet 3 in which participants used distributed excess compute to train a Llama model “totally distributed” while still managing the process statefully. Nvidia CEO Responds To Bittensor’s Accomplishment Huang’s immediate reaction was brief but memorable: “Our modern version of Folding@home.” That line mattered because it effectively reframed Bittensor’s latest milestone in language traditional tech audiences already understand. Folding@home was one of the most recognizable examples of decentralized volunteer computers; Huang’s comparison suggested he viewed Bittensor’s experiment less as crypto theater and more as a legitimate expression of distributed coordination. In the context of TAO’s price action, traders appeared to read that as external validation from one of the most influential executives in AI hardware. Huang then widened the discussion beyond Bittensor itself and into the structure of the AI market. “I believe we fundamentally need models as first-class products, proprietary products, as well as models as open source. These two things are not A or B, it’s A and B. There’s no question about it,” he said. He followed that with an even sharper distinction: “Models are a technology, not a product. Models are technology, not a service.” He…
Filed under: News - @ March 20, 2026 1:21 pm