Why Subnet 62 (Ridges) & Subnet 41 (Sportstensor) Could Lead TAO’s Future

By: Gab

Subnet 62 – Ridges: AI-Powered Research Engine

Ridges is designed to organize and rank the world’s research knowledge.

Problem Solved:

The internet’s research content is fragmented, unverified, and buried under irrelevant search results.

How It Works:

Miners provide models that ingest academic papers, research datasets, and technical knowledge. Ridges scores them based on accuracy, novelty, and usefulness.

Why It’s Valuable:

➡️ Builds a trustworthy research layer for AI models.

➡️ Can power specialized search for scientists, biotech, and enterprise R&D.

➡️ Data advantage compounds over time, the more knowledge it processes, the better it gets.

Big Picture:

Ridges could become the “Google Scholar 2.0” of decentralized AI, which is highly defensible and hard for competitors to replicate.

Subnet 41 – Sportensor: Real-Time Sports Intelligence

Sportensor focuses on real-time sports predictions, analytics, and content generation.

Problem Solved:

Sports bettors, fantasy leagues, and broadcasters need instant, accurate insights not delayed or biased by centralized providers.

How It Works:

Miners provide prediction models for live games (odds, performance stats, play outcomes) across multiple sports. Validators reward models that prove accurate in real-time.

Why It’s Valuable:

➡️ Massive addressable marketsports betting and analytics exceed $300B+ globally.

➡️ Delivers a trustless prediction oracle for web3 gaming, fantasy sports, and decentralized sportsbooks.

➡️ Community-driven model updates keep it ahead of centralized APIs.

Big Picture: Sportensor can dominate the sports data + AI prediction market, a space where live accuracy and decentralization are key.

Why Both Will Lead

➡️ They solve real-world, high-demand problems with massive existing markets.

➡️ They’re data-compounding subnets the more they’re used, the stronger their moat.

➡️ Their outputs can feed into other subnets (like trading, news summarization, and language models), making them core infrastructure.

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