Cointime

Download App
iOS & Android

Governance & DAOs III: Cooperative models

From mirror by polynya August 9th, 2023

DAOs are meant to be an abbreviation for Decentralized Autonomous Organization. Such an entity would actually necessarily require no governance. Adding in governance makes it definitely not autonomous and arguably not decentralized. Largely because crypto is all about tokens and speculation, DAOs have thus headed down the public companies model, with tokenholders as shareholders. The only real innovation here has been skirting securities laws and thus increasing accessibility to tokenholders. Following the ICO mania, “STOs” were a brief fad - basically public companies adhering to securities laws on blockchain. Needless to say, these went nowhere as they missed the key selling point of DAOs as we know them - evading securities laws. Meanwhile, accessibility for registered securities have improved significantly by Fintech, though still have further room for improvement. It’s certainly possible and likely that some registered securities are floated on public blockchains alongside their traditional rails in the future, but it’s a marginal gain at best.

Before starting this polynya pseudonym, my prior crypto interest was Steem, social networks & governance, and I have spoken at length about how cooperatives were a better model for DAOs in many scenarios. I have also mentioned this idea on Twitter several times, but never wrote a blog post about it. In mid-2016, some of us Steem community members founded a curation DAO called Curie, which is still active on Steem’s fork Hive. This would be make it one of the earliest DAOs that’s still active and sustainable. Curie never had a token, never had public ownership by rando tokenholders, but remained accessible and open, and run democratically by its workers & users.

The key is taking inspiration not from public companies, but rather cooperatives. Now, cooperatives come in many shapes and forms, and so can their DAO counterparts.

The simplest form would be what I’ve previously called Worker DAOs. A lot of smart contracts are simple and straightforward, some may even be immutable, while others require only minor and occasional upgrades/parameter changes. In many of these cases, you don’t necessarily need a huge DAO with many owners. The developers can themselves run the DAO democratically, with a 1-person-1-vote model. New workers can be appointed by the existing ones. Now, of course, this is not going to work for projects with upgradable contracts holding billions of dollars, but particularly in a mature state, you don’t want tokenholders having sway over the same anyway. I expect the endgame for a lot of smart contracts to be immutability, at least the parts of the protocol storing value.

An imperfect hybrid is also possible: Worker DAOs can raise capital by selling profit-sharing rights, but not ownership rights. So, you could still get a token that crypto loves, but it’s not used for governance - just for investors and profit-sharing via protocol fees.

Now, cooperatives just mean a group of people democratically owning the protocol, as opposed to plutocratically by stakeholders/tokenholders. It doesn’t have to be workers - it can be users of the protocol, developers that build on it, other protocols that interact with it, or a combination of the above. It depends on the protocol, where you can fine-tune the ownership structure that’s best suited.

How are cooperatives different from non-profit organizations and democratic governments, then? Of course, it’s the profit motive. The actual innovation of smart contracts is where you can have an immutable contract with no owner and no fees. Where a cooperative-style DAO would differ is there would be a reasonable protocol fee or revenue stream in some way or another. Some protocols certainly behave closer to small governments than cooperatives, so we can definitely have experimentation around such a model. Indeed, Optimism’s Citizen House rings closer to a government than a cooperative, as a contrast to its entirely plutocratic Token House.

Lastly, the public companies with plutocratic ownership model is a tried & tested one that has been successful for centuries. For some DAOs, tokenholder ownership will continue to be an important method, if not the only one (as seen in Optimism). I just don’t think it’s the only one, and many DAOs will be better off with a cooperative model, with a hybrid of revenue-sharing tokens and capital raises if required.

Then there’s being an actual Decentralized Autonomous Organization and not having any governance at all - like I mentioned, that would be an actual innovation over traditional models discussed above. Bitcoin is the closest to achieving this goal, and I hope Ethereum gets there soon too. (As a side note: what about proof-of-work/proof-of-stake? - yes, they are plutocratic in nature, but also a systemic mechanism, rather than an ownership one. The ownership rights remain with full node operators.) Either way, whichever model is chosen, the goal should be minimizing governance. Or not! Some DAOs may actually be better off very actively governed. Which is all I’ll say - there’s a right governance model that exists for every project, depending on the project, and it’s rarely just launch a token and have tokenholders vote on proposals.

DAO
Comments

All Comments

Recommended for you

  • SlowMist: Beware of watering hole attacks launched by malicious attackers using WordPress plugin vulnerabilities

    SlowMist Security has issued a warning that attackers have recently been exploiting vulnerabilities in WordPress plugins to inject malicious JS code into normal websites and launch watering hole attacks. These attacks involve popping up malicious windows when users visit the site, deceiving them into executing malicious code or performing Web3 wallet signatures, thereby stealing their assets. It is recommended that sites using WordPress plugins check for vulnerabilities, update plugins in a timely manner, and avoid being attacked. When visiting any website, users should carefully identify the downloaded programs and Web3 signature content to avoid downloading malicious programs or having their assets stolen due to malicious signatures.

  • Unverified Ember Sword NFT auction contract vulnerability has caused nearly $200,000 in losses

    Certik has discovered a vulnerability in the unverified Ember Sword NFT auction contract, which has earned 60 WETH (approximately $195,000) from 159 victims who approved the contract. Certik reminds users to revoke their approval of the relevant contract on Polygon.

  • zkSync ecological lending platform xBank Finance suspected of RUG

    xBank Finance, a zkSync ecosystem lending platform, was suspected of being a RUG, and the protocol's TVL was close to zero. The project's official Twitter account has been frozen.

  • Scammers use fake USDT balances to defraud cryptocurrency users

    SlowMist has partnered with Imtoken to uncover a new cryptocurrency scam that uses offline transactions and USDT. Scammers manipulate the Ethereum RPC to falsify the USDT balance in the victim's wallet. The scammer lures the victim to change their Ethereum RPC URL to a URL controlled by them, making it appear that the victim has deposited USDT funds, but in reality, the victim is left empty-handed when attempting to trade. In addition, the scam also deceives users through small transfers to gain trust, then manipulates account balances and contract information, posing serious risks to unsuspecting users and is related to a wider range of pig slaughter scam activities.

  • Cointime April 27th News Express

    1. ETH falls below $3,100

  • HKEX: Accepts BOS HashKey, Huaxia, Harvest Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs as eligible securities for multiple counters in the central clearing system

    On April 27th, the Hong Kong Stock Exchange issued three notices, announcing the inclusion of Bo Shi HashKey Bitcoin ETF shares and Bo Shi HashKey Ethereum ETF shares, Huaxia Bitcoin ETF shares and Huaxia Ethereum ETF shares, and Jia Shi Bitcoin Spot ETF shares and Jia Shi Ethereum Spot ETF shares as Central Clearing System multi-counterparty eligible securities. It is reported that:

  • Russia’s Central Bank and Rosfinmonitoring unveil pilot of fiat-to-crypto tracking system

    According to reports, since 2023, Russia has been trying to track cryptocurrency transactions and their sources. The Russian Central Bank and the Federal Financial Monitoring Service (Rosfinmonitoring) revealed that there is currently a system that allows private banks to track the connection between fiat-based transactions and cryptocurrency business.

  • PolkaWorld: Coretime trading on Kusama has started

    On April 27th, PolkaWorld announced that Coretime trading on Kusama has begun, marking the end of the era of parallel chains. With the approval and implementation of Kusama proposal 373, the proposal will upgrade the Kusama relay chain runtime to v1.2.0 and bring Coretime functionality. Shortly thereafter, the Kusama community approved Kusmaa proposal 375 last Friday, allowing Coretime chain to begin selling Coretime. Currently, Kusama is in the Renew Period and is selling batches of Coretime.

  • Left-Curving DAOs

    For the past twenty one days I have been obsessed with a decentralized project called Higher. If interested in the origin lore you can read more here.

  • DAOs as novelty search engines

    DAOs are collaborative networks which are likely to have a unique role in the future. To determine this role, you need to be able to look beyond what is happening today. Like a toddler taking its first steps, the DAOs of today are immature, unsteady and likely to stumble.