Talk:Reputation tokenomics: Difference between revisions

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(DGF treasury discussion)
 
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== NOTE ==
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[[User:Craig Calcaterra|Craig Calcaterra]] ([[User talk:Craig Calcaterra|talk]]) 01:03, 2 March 2023 (CST)
=Treasury=
Question: Without a treasury, how would a DAO be setup for acute problems? I'm not saying we need a big treasury, I just don't see how the DAO being totally illiquid is practical, vs. ideal. Especially, if the DAO gets more powerful/influential, I don't know how it would handle all of the different attacks without a treasury. Just as there is social redundancy in a decentralized organization, maybe it also needs financial redundancy/inefficiencies as well for survival?
Question: Without a treasury, how would a DAO be setup for acute problems? I'm not saying we need a big treasury, I just don't see how the DAO being totally illiquid is practical, vs. ideal. Especially, if the DAO gets more powerful/influential, I don't know how it would handle all of the different attacks without a treasury. Just as there is social redundancy in a decentralized organization, maybe it also needs financial redundancy/inefficiencies as well for survival?


Reference: Reputation Tokenomics, Oct 4 Version - Craig Calcaterra
Reference: Reputation Tokenomics, Oct 4 Version - Craig Calcaterra


Context: Reputation tokenomics tries to eliminate treasuries all together and have all incentives pushed to long-term/delayed payment/gratification. DGF focuses on values of stability and the long-term thinking, but DGF will need inevitably face unexpected situations so not investing in the build up of a treasury seems tenuous.
Context: Reputation tokenomics tries to eliminate treasuries all together and have all incentives pushed to long-term/delayed payment/gratification. DGF focuses on values of stability and the long-term thinking, but DGF will need inevitably face unexpected situations so not investing in the build up of a treasury seems tenuous.<br>
--Jonathan
== Treasury is necessary in some contexts, suboptimal in others ==
Yes, I agree with that. Before a DAO achieves a measurable, stable history of a fee rate, then a treasury gives the DAO objective substance. For example a DAO with a treasury is more valuable than a clone of the same DAO with no treasury. So yes, a treasury can be necessary for some purposes. Including the need to smooth out disruptions due to black swan events in the economy. Including the need to signal to others in an obvious way that people have invested in the DAO, proving it is valuable--which may be necessary to attract members, e.g.<br><br>
 
However, any liquid money that sits in a treasury is subject to holding costs. Money in a treasury that is not used is wasted on inflation. So a more sophisticated financial approach to funding DAO development is to issue BONDs--these tools capital. An even more sophisticated approach to development is to encourage a culture of trusting the reference mechanism in the Forum. Both of those solutions are impractical in a new DAO. Those mechanisms I talk about are only for the future, when there are DAOs with history and have fee inertia.  <br>
<br>
More importantly, a treasury is an existential threat to a DAO. Cash is a zero-sum reward in game theory. So a treasury is a source of competition for DAO members. That leads to differentiation of members as some get more power over the treasury, which leads to centralization. <br>
So I'm suspicious of people who work in this space who are focused on building treasuries. They seem possessed by some spirit of greed--I imagine them suppressing a drool reflex barely able to resist snatching at it. <br>
Don't get me wrong. I'm all about getting the money. But I want lots of it, over a long period of time, patiently collecting it in the future by earning reputation.
[[User:Craig Calcaterra|Craig Calcaterra]] ([[User talk:Craig Calcaterra|talk]]) 01:03, 2 March 2023 (CST)

Revision as of 02:03, 2 March 2023

NOTE

Feel free to add whatever thoughts here. Click 'Add topic' to separate subjects.
Please sign all comments by typing 4 tildes (~).
Craig Calcaterra (talk) 01:03, 2 March 2023 (CST)

Treasury

Question: Without a treasury, how would a DAO be setup for acute problems? I'm not saying we need a big treasury, I just don't see how the DAO being totally illiquid is practical, vs. ideal. Especially, if the DAO gets more powerful/influential, I don't know how it would handle all of the different attacks without a treasury. Just as there is social redundancy in a decentralized organization, maybe it also needs financial redundancy/inefficiencies as well for survival?

Reference: Reputation Tokenomics, Oct 4 Version - Craig Calcaterra

Context: Reputation tokenomics tries to eliminate treasuries all together and have all incentives pushed to long-term/delayed payment/gratification. DGF focuses on values of stability and the long-term thinking, but DGF will need inevitably face unexpected situations so not investing in the build up of a treasury seems tenuous.
--Jonathan

Treasury is necessary in some contexts, suboptimal in others

Yes, I agree with that. Before a DAO achieves a measurable, stable history of a fee rate, then a treasury gives the DAO objective substance. For example a DAO with a treasury is more valuable than a clone of the same DAO with no treasury. So yes, a treasury can be necessary for some purposes. Including the need to smooth out disruptions due to black swan events in the economy. Including the need to signal to others in an obvious way that people have invested in the DAO, proving it is valuable--which may be necessary to attract members, e.g.

However, any liquid money that sits in a treasury is subject to holding costs. Money in a treasury that is not used is wasted on inflation. So a more sophisticated financial approach to funding DAO development is to issue BONDs--these tools capital. An even more sophisticated approach to development is to encourage a culture of trusting the reference mechanism in the Forum. Both of those solutions are impractical in a new DAO. Those mechanisms I talk about are only for the future, when there are DAOs with history and have fee inertia.

More importantly, a treasury is an existential threat to a DAO. Cash is a zero-sum reward in game theory. So a treasury is a source of competition for DAO members. That leads to differentiation of members as some get more power over the treasury, which leads to centralization.
So I'm suspicious of people who work in this space who are focused on building treasuries. They seem possessed by some spirit of greed--I imagine them suppressing a drool reflex barely able to resist snatching at it.
Don't get me wrong. I'm all about getting the money. But I want lots of it, over a long period of time, patiently collecting it in the future by earning reputation. Craig Calcaterra (talk) 01:03, 2 March 2023 (CST)