Darkbloom: Hardware-Attested Inference via Mandatory MDM
Darkbloom aims to commoditize idle Apple Silicon by building a decentralized inference network with hardware-level verification. Developed by the Eigen Labs team, the platform promises Mac owners up t

The Pitch
Darkbloom aims to commoditize idle Apple Silicon by building a decentralized inference network with hardware-level verification. Developed by the Eigen Labs team, the platform promises Mac owners up to $2,000 per month for hosting models via an OpenAI-compatible API (source: HN).
Under the Hood
Darkbloom leverages Apple’s Secure Enclave to sign and verify that inference code remains untampered with during execution (source: Darkbloom.dev). This hardware-level attestation provides a "verifiable privacy" layer for developers routing requests through the network (source: YouTube Demo). The source code is currently managed under the Layr-Labs GitHub organization (source: GitHub).
While the technical premise is sound, the implementation requires node operators to install a Mobile Device Management (MDM) profile (source: Operator Docs). This grants Darkbloom root-level administrative control, allowing them to view installed apps, modify SSL certificates, or remote-wipe the host machine (source: Reddit r/sysadmin). It is a staggering security concession for a supposedly decentralized tool.
The economic claims are currently decoupled from reality. The $1,000–$2,000 monthly profit estimates assume 100% network utilization, yet current operators report receiving almost no requests beyond automated health checks (source: HN). Furthermore, sustained high-load inference on unified memory architecture poses a genuine risk to hardware longevity due to thermal stress (source: HN).
We don't know yet how stable the "in-process" memory isolation on Metal actually is for long-term production workloads. Additionally, there is no public information regarding the legal liability for node operators if their hardware is used to serve non-compliant or illegal content.
Marcus's Take
Darkbloom is currently a research project masquerading as a passive income stream, and a dangerous one at that. Handing over MDM control of a $3,000 MacBook for the "theoretical" chance of a few dollars is a trade only a masochist or an EigenLayer maximalist would make. The TEE attestation tech is worth watching, but until they find actual buyers for the compute and ditch the MDM requirement, your Mac is safer as a paperweight. Skip this.
Ship clean code,
Marcus.

Marcus Webb - Senior Backend Analyst at UsedBy.ai
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