
Proof of Talk 2026 Recap: Bittensor Takes Center Stage at the Louvre
Proof of Talk 2026 wrapped up on June 3 after two intense days at the Louvre Palace in Paris. The summit gathered 2,500 attendees and more than 120 speakers. Moreover, the institutions in the room represented a claimed $18 trillion in assets under management. For Bittensor, this edition mattered more than ever before. The dedicated Bittensor Track ran across both days of the event. This Proof of Talk 2026 recap covers the biggest announcements, the strongest sessions, and the honest community feedback.
A Packed Bittensor Track With Unmatched Energy

The first takeaway from Paris is simple. The Bittensor rooms were full from start to finish. Attendees described nearly twenty hours of programming packed into forty-eight hours. Subnet owners, miners, validators, builders, and investors talked constantly between sessions. Compared to the traditional finance panels nearby, the energy around Bittensor stood out immediately.
That energy reflects real scale. Community estimates place the active Bittensor ecosystem in the several-thousand-person range. This count includes subnet teams, miners, validators, contributors, and service providers. Moreover, more than 100 subnets now build on the network across compute, training, agents, and data.
Both Bittensor co-founders appeared on the official agenda. Jacob Steeves, known as Const, headlined the fireside on the unification of AI and Bitcoin. Meanwhile, Ala Shaabana delivered one of the most quoted moments of the summit. In a widely shared remark, Shaabana reportedly compared Bitcoin’s hash rate to the power of the world’s leading supercomputers. He used the analogy to argue that decentralized incentive systems can coordinate compute at scale. Bittensor applies the same logic, with a 21 million token hard cap, halvings, and a fair launch. However, the network redirects the mining competition toward useful AI work.
Proof of Talk 2026 Recap: The Biggest Product Announcements

Every Proof of Talk 2026 recap has to start with Targon (SN4). The confidential compute team used its stage time to unveil the Targon Tower Pro. Community coverage described it as one of the first major physical hardware products from the Bittensor ecosystem. The entry build ships with eight Nvidia RTX 5090 GPUs and 512GB of RAM. Higher configurations scale to H100 and H200 accelerators with up to 2TB of memory. Additionally, each system includes an Earning Mode that monetizes idle GPU capacity through Targon’s confidential computing network. Reservations are already open. Attendees compared the polish of the keynote to a major Apple product launch. Many called the reveal the highlight of the conference. More info here.
Score, Metanova, BitMind, and IOTA Bring Fresh Updates

Score (SN44) delivered the largest capital announcement. On June 1, the eve of the summit, TaoWeave published an official press release. The company announced a $1 million investment in Manako Labs, the team behind Score’s commercial physical AI platform. The agreement combines equity ownership with a preferred commercialization partnership covering North America. Furthermore, it includes revenue sharing from licensing deals. On stage, the Score team stressed an important point. The subnet remains permissionless, decentralized, and open to everyone, even as enterprise adoption accelerates. More info here.

The Macrocosmos team behind IOTA (SN9) also earned praise. The timing helped. On June 2, the team unveiled Orion-100B, a 100-billion-parameter distributed AI training run on Bittensor. According to TAO Media, the run achieved up to 65% of datacenter training efficiency using globally distributed GPUs. Additionally, attendee reports described a live demonstration of a 128-node permissionless training run. The demo finished in roughly five minutes and cost around 5 TAO. More info here.

Metanova (SN68) brought the most ambitious scientific update. According to attendee reports, co-founder Micaela Bazo revealed a new strategic direction for the drug discovery subnet. The team now starts the process of producing a specific drug. This step builds on the research the network has generated since inception. Additionally, BitMind (SN34) founder Ken Jon Miyachi shared corporate developments. Per post-event commentary, those updates point toward commercial revenue in the near future.
Claims Wins Proof of Pitch at the Louvre

The conference closed with its most entertaining format. Bitstarter hosted an almost three-hour competition inspired by the Shark Tank model. The jury included Jacob Steeves (Const) alongside prominent ecosystem investors. Four teams pitched new subnet concepts live in front of the audience.
According to attendee reports, DeSciClaims emerged as the standout project of the night. Community accounts suggest the team raised 184 TAO from the judges and the crowd during the live session. Based on those reports, the Claims team now plans a Bittensor subnet for auditing scientific research. Community accounts also named Provenance as the second winner, thanks to a strong pitch around verified AI execution. For many attendees, the session offered the clearest preview of the next generation of Bittensor projects.
Enterprise Adoption Steals the Final Afternoon

According to multiple participants, the strongest session of the conference focused on enterprise adoption of Bittensor. BTLabs moderated the panel and explained its pragmatic approach. The team reverses the typical startup playbook. Instead of building a subnet first, BTLabs starts with real business problems. Then it assembles solutions from the capabilities of existing subnets.
The panel featured Max Sebti from Score and Jean-Thomas Ledoré from PwC France. James Altucher and Shane Smith from Alera Group joined them. Ledoré impressed the room with his ability to connect traditional business needs to Bittensor’s capabilities. Most importantly, the discussion delivered something the community rarely hears directly. Corporate professionals confirmed they see concrete opportunities and competitive advantages in the network.
Another standout came from Sami, the analyst from Messari and Unsupervised Capital. He argued that the bear case for subnets remains remarkably thin. Moreover, he pointed to the extraordinary concentration of innovation inside Bittensor. He highlighted Chutes, 404-GEN, Oro, and Synth as examples of the network’s momentum.
DeFi, Real Estate, and Forward Plans on Day Two
Day two also featured a private roundtable hosted by Zipcode (SN46). Founder Seby Rubino presented the roadmap for bringing real estate to Bittensor. The team plans to show the first loan on Novelty Search on June 11. The demo will take place during a session on the official Bittensor Discord. Meanwhile, General Tensor and Talisman ran a DeFi panel around TensorFi. Targon also followed up its keynote with a workshop on applied confidential computing.
Honest Feedback From the Community
A balanced Proof of Talk 2026 recap also includes the critique. Several engaged attendees felt the programming leaned too heavily on introductory content. Roughly a day and a half covered foundational topics that most of the audience already knew well. As a result, the community now calls for deeper protocol discussions and more ambitious announcements at future editions.
Observers also noticed that several leading subnets kept a low profile in the official program. The list includes Chutes (SN64), Ridges (SN62), Affine (SN120), Lium (SN51), Gradients (SN56), and Vanta (SN8). Chutes alone reportedly generates around $1.5 million in revenue every ninety days. Therefore, its limited stage presence surprised many participants. Community voices framed this as a coordination opportunity rather than a failure. The expectation for next year is clear: more headliners on stage.
What This Proof of Talk 2026 Means for Bittensor

Post-event commentary from Paris points to one clear theme. Bittensor moves from explaining ideas to shipping products. Every takeaway in this Proof of Talk 2026 recap supports that shift. The ecosystem now shows physical hardware with the Targon Tower Pro. It shows enterprise validation from PwC France and Alera Group. It also shows real capital flowing into subnet companies like Manako Labs. Additionally, scientific ambition shines through Metanova’s drug development push. Furthermore, the Proof of Pitch finale suggested that fresh teams keep choosing Bittensor as the place to launch.
The energy in the rooms pointed in one direction. So did the scale of the community and the quality of the announcements. Bittensor enters the second half of 2026 with momentum. Moreover, Proof of Talk is becoming one of the key stages where the ecosystem shows that progress publicly.
FAQ:
A premier Web3 summit at the Louvre Palace in Paris, held on June 2 and 3, 2026, with 2,500 attendees and a dedicated Bittensor Track.
Targon (SN4) unveiled the Targon Tower Pro, a physical AI computer with up to eight GPUs and an Earning Mode for idle compute.
According to attendee reports, DeSciClaims won after raising 184 TAO live, with Provenance as the second winner.
TaoWeave invested $1 million in Manako Labs, the team behind Score (SN44), with commercialization rights covering North America.
Zipcode (SN46) shows the first loan on Novelty Search on June 11, and the Claims team prepares its science auditing subnet.


