Cointime

Download App
iOS & Android

Introducing the Citizens’ House: 10m OP to Public Goods

Validated Project

Optimism is many things: a rapidly diversifying economy, a stack of open source modules for scalable blockchains, and a Collective of companies, contributors, and community members working towards common goals. It is an ethos and a vibe.

Optimism’s vision is to create a global economy with a profit motive for public goods. To reach this vision, Optimism is pioneering a new model for digital governance – one that both echoes our earliest democracies and learns from our industry’s current patterns.

Nearly two years ago, Optimism mainnet launched. Last Spring, the first branch of the Optimism Collective governance was born when the Token House came online.

Today, Optimism is announcing its second round of Retroactive Public Goods Funding, which dedicates 10m OP tokens to fund public goods. We’re also introducing the first iteration of the Citizens’ House to govern how this funding is allocated.

This is the next step towards delivering on Optimism’s core belief that rewarding public good to the collective with profit to the individual is key to growing a vibrant economy.

Bicameral balance

The Citizens’ House exists as an equal counterpart to the Token House.

The Token House, made up of OP token holders and their delegates, uses a traditional model of coin voting to govern the core economics of the Optimism Collective, including ecosystem grants, oversight of the OP token treasury, and certain network parameters like sequencing.

But a system that serves human utility must be capture-resistant, which pure token voting inherently can never provide.

Enter the Citizens' House: a one-person one-vote system which roots power not in financial capability, but in identity. Together, the Token House and Citizens’ House make decisions for the Collective.

Funding public goods to build a better economy

The primary responsibility of the Citizens’ House is determining how to allocate funding for public goods. Why?

Because our world is built on public goods, and those public goods are crumbling.

Open source software has fueled the internet’s progress, but its production is woefully underfunded. Builders burn out while corporations profit off their free legos. Without financial support, free software becomes unsafe — putting users, companies, and communities at risk.

And when building public goods isn’t profitable, the best and brightest of our generation are drawn to more lucrative work, rationally putting self-interest above the needs of the community.

The Optimism Collective believes that building public goods should be profitable.

This key ingredient to the Optimistic vision is more than just altruism – it’s core to our success. Optimism’s codebase itself is an open-source project, and builds on the shoulders of countless OSS giants which came before it.

This means public goods funding is a critical growth strategy. For Optimism, well-funded public goods means better developer tooling, widespread user education, safer infrastructure, and industry-leading research. It means Optimism can last and thrive.

Once we show that this model can drive a successful economy for the Collective, we can take the principle of impact = profit to the world.

How does RetroPGF work?

The Citizens’ House funds public goods through a process called “retroactive public goods funding” (RetroPGF). RetroPGF is based on the idea that it’s easier to determine what was useful than to issue proactive grants for what might be useful. The process runs as a series of discrete rounds, each with the same structure:

First, a scope of funding is declared publicly. What utility or positive externality are we trying to fund? In the initial few rounds of RetroPGF, funding scope is determined by the Optimism Foundation. Eventually Citizens will determine funding scope themselves based on what they determine the Collective needs.

Afterwards, impact is evaluated. The Citizens’ House reviews projects and votes on impact against the declared funding scope. The output is a set of scores that determine how much funding each project receives.

Optimism has committed to distributing 20% of the OP token treasury through RetroPGF. RetroPGF 2 will be funded from that allocation. Future RetroPGF rounds will incorporate additional funding sources such as protocol profits.

The cycle is simple, but the details are endless. What criteria do voters use to evaluate impact? What information are projects required to share? What voting algorithm is most effective at revealing group preference? How does the product experience affect voting outcomes? What is our working definition of the “public” we are benefitting?

Keeping to our principle of iterative governance, Optimism will run many rounds of RetroPGF over the coming years to experiment with design and process. These iterations will bring together theory, practice, and feedback from the community to explore how to build a mutually beneficial retroactive funding process.

Announcing RetroPGF 2

RetroPGF 2 is the second instance of Optimism’s ongoing funding experiments. In January 2023, RetroPGF 2 will distribute 10 million OP tokens to fund public goods that support development and usage of the OP Stack.

Work may be nominated in one of three categories:

Infrastructure + Dependencies: software used to build or deploy the OP Stack; contributions to protocols or standards the OP Stack depends on run; experiments that support future development of the core OP Stack protocol.

Tooling + Utilities: work that helps builders create applications on Optimism mainnet, build on the OP Stack, interact with governance of the Collective, or use applications built on Optimism.

Education: work to spread awareness and knowledge of how Optimism works, whether technically or socially.

Why this scope? We can’t talk about funding public goods without supporting the free software that powers Optimism itself. From repurposing Ethereum’s codebase, which allows our network to provide unparalleled EVM equivalence, to the countless tools our developers build with, to our own code itself – Optimism bleeds open source.

In aggregate, we call the code which powers Optimism the OP Stack. Supporting the public goods which power it will help Optimism bring a new economy to global scale.

The process for RetroPGF 2 is as follows:

Anyone may nominate projects or individuals for funding from January 3 - 17 on the Optimism Governance Forum.

In order to be eligible for funding, nominated projects or individuals must complete a project profile in the Gitcoin Grants Hub between January 3 - 24.

RetroPGF 2 badgeholders will vote on how to allocate funding to projects. Voting will take place from January 31 through February 10.

Results will be announced in late February, followed by a public community retrospective.

For more information on the process, visit the RetroPGF 2 documentation. For announcements and updates, follow @OptimismGov on Twitter.

Voting badges

Voting badges for RetroPGF 2 will be distributed to 90 community members:

Each badgeholder in RetroPGF 1 will receive a new voting badge, and will be able to distribute a voting badge to one community member of their choosing.

Optimism’s Token House will elect ten badgeholders, each of whom will be able to distribute a voting badge to one community member of their choosing.

Finally, the Optimism Foundation will distribute 21 voting badges to community members, each of whom will be able to distribute a voting badge to one community member of their choosing.

The Optimism Foundation will distribute badges using the following guidelines, and encourages other badgeholders to consider these criteria in their own distribution:

💖 Is this person a proven advocate for the value of public goods, in crypto or beyond?

💡 Can this person help advance the process and structure of retroPGF as a funding mechanism?

🔎 Is this person a domain expert in any of the categories up for funding in RetroPGF 2?

🌱 Has this person shown strong alignment with the long term growth of the Optimism ecosystem and the mission of the Collective?

Voting in RetroPGF 2 does not guarantee permanent participation in the Citizens’ House and future iterations of RetroPGF. Citizenship criteria may change dramatically. Ownership over citizenship distribution is eventually the responsibility of Optimism’s two-house governance system.

For more information on RetroPGF 2 and the Citizens’ House, visit our governance documentation.

Beyond RetroPGF 2

This round of RetroPGF 2 is the next step on an evolving journey. In this phase, the Citizens’ House will only be responsible for voting on RetroPGF within a scope and process provided by the Optimism Foundation.

In future stages, the Citizens’ House role will expand. For example, in addition to voting on RetroPGF funding, the Citizens’ House will work alongside the Token House to govern allocation of protocol profit, collaborate on criteria for participation in the Citizens’ House, and engage in a system of checks and balances to enforce the Collective’s Codes of Conduct.

In its final form, we envision a global Citizens’ House made up of many thousands of Optimists, where a good reputation in the Collective can earn anyone a seat at the table.

To create the foundation for this identity-based governance, Optimism is introducing a simple identity layer called the AttestationStation as part of the Citizens’ House v0.1 launch. The AttestationStation is a straightforward registry contract that serves as the Collective's first experiment for reputation production and consumption in the Optimism ecosystem. Eventually the Citizens’ and Token Houses may grant citizenship based on reputation recorded in the AttestationStation.

We expect this process to be emergent, community-led, and participatory. There’s plenty to explore, including zero-knowledge and private attestations, composability with other teams building decentralized identity, and applications in consumer experiences.

The Collective will continue to run RetroPGF rounds in tandem with growth of this reputation system, increasing the number of citizens over time.

RetroPGF 3 will happen later in 2023; its scope will be announced publicly at the end of RetroPGF 2.

Building together

RetroPGF is a core part of Optimism’s vision. If done right, it will form the backbone for a new type of economy. As with any complex system, though, this new process can’t be centrally planned or designed all at once. The only way to build it well is to build it together. This journey will require care, open-mindedness, patience, and – yep we’re goin’ there – optimism.

Anyone can get involved with RetroPGF by nominating projects during the open nomination period from Jan 3 – 17. More information on how to make nominations will be shared on the Governance Forum and by @OptimismGov on Twitter.

Comments

All Comments

Recommended for you

  • Cointime May 3rd News Express

    1. The 133rd Ethereum ACDC meeting: The goal is to complete the devnet within 7-10 days

  • Paribu wallet address transferred more than 4 trillion PEPE, worth about 31 million US dollars

    According to Whale Alert monitoring, the Paribu wallet address transferred 4,049,371,347,309 PEPE tokens worth approximately $31,091,073 via the Ethereum blockchain at around 17:20 today, and all tokens were transferred to an address starting with "0xa23c".

  • Huaxia Virtual Asset ETF's AUM exceeds HK$1 billion, while Bosera and Harvest AUM both exceed HK$500 million

    According to the latest virtual asset ETF asset management scale data from HKEX as of May 3rd:1. Huaxia Ether ETF has an asset management scale of HKD 146.16 million, and Huaxia Bitcoin ETF has reached HKD 880.25 million, with a total amount exceeding HKD 1 billion, reaching HKD 1.02641 billion;2. Bosera HashKey Ether ETF has an asset management scale of HKD 96.59 million, and Bosera HashKey Bitcoin ETF has reached HKD 478.09 million, with a total of HKD 574.58 million;3. Harvest Ether ETF has an asset management scale of HKD 89.97 million, and the encrypted Bitcoin ETF has reached HKD 449.39 million, with a total of HKD 539.36 million.

  • FRIEND fell below $3, and the ecosystem TVL dropped to the $30 million range

    According to DexScreener data, the trading price of friend.tech tokens has fallen below $3 and is currently at $2.31. The current circulating supply is approximately 14.5 million. According to DeFiLlama data, the friend.tech ecosystem's TVL has dropped to the $30 million range, with a 13.6% decline over the past 7 days. Friend.tech was launched on the Ethereum Layer 2 network Base in August of last year. The ecosystem's TVL had once surpassed $50 million and is currently the 9th largest protocol on the Base chain.

  • Animoca Brands: MOCA token distribution is planned to take place around May 24

    Animoca Brands officially announced that the distribution of MOCA tokens is planned to take place around May 24th. The token release information includes:

  • NFT lending platform Blend’s total transaction volume exceeded US$6 billion, with more than 650,000 loans

    The latest data from Dune shows that the total transaction volume of Blend, an NFT lending platform under Blur, has exceeded 6 billion US dollars, reaching 6,048,459,706 US dollars at the time of writing, with a total of 659,353 loans; the total number of independent borrowing users is 10,458, and the total number of independent lending users is 4,447. The current total active loan amount is 3,347, with an active loan amount of approximately 6,013 ETH.

  • Yuga Labs will migrate the Otherside metaverse to Improbable’s Msquared

    Yuga Labs and Improbable announced the migration of Otherside Metaverse to Improbable's Msquared, which is Improbable's interconnected Metaverse network. By rebuilding Otherside, Yuga Labs will provide the community with the ability to build in large-scale environments and interoperability. Improbable and Yuga Labs also announced other news about the development of Otherside, including a large multiplayer game event in July and the launch of Otherside development toolkit World Builder ODK.

  • friend.tech has opened airdrop token applications, FRIEND is currently priced at $3.34

    According to the official website, friend.tech has opened up the airdrop of the token FRIEND for claiming, with FRIEND currently priced at $3.34. Previously reported, friend.tech will release version 2 and conduct an airdrop on May 3rd.

  • The 133rd Ethereum ACDC meeting: The goal is to complete the devnet within 7-10 days

    The Ethereum developers held their 133rd ACDC conference call. First, they outlined the latest research on Ethereum protocol confirmation rules. Then, they discussed Pectra updates related to EIP-7547 and CFI states, and decided to put them on hold temporarily. They also updated the v1.5.0-alpha.1 specification. Regarding the implementation updates for devnet-0, most teams are making progress, but there are also some unexpected complexities. The goal is to complete devnet within 7-10 days.

  • The Bitcoin-native stablecoin bitSmiley Alphanet V1 Surpasses $24M TVL in 24 Hours!

    In a remarkable achievement, bitSmiley's Alphanet V1 skyrocketed to over $24 million in TVL within just 24 hours of its launch with over 6 million bitUSD stablecoins minted through over-collateralization. bitSmiley stands as a pioneering initiative, introducing stablecoins by over-collateralizing Bitcoin.