Social DAO: Difference between revisions

From DAO Governance Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
Line 5: Line 5:


# Pure Governance system with no money component (danger of nothing at stake)
# Pure Governance system with no money component (danger of nothing at stake)
# Part money redistribution: Abstract the structure from Scholarship DAO,
# Partial money redistribution: Abstract the structure from Scholarship DAO,


== Examples ==
== Examples ==


* [[Scholarship DAO]]
* [[Scholarship DAO]]
* Poverty relief
* Poverty relief DAO
* Community policing
* [[Policing DAOs]]
* Social harmony
* Social harmony
* Hybrids
* Hybrids
Line 21: Line 21:
** [[Oracles]]
** [[Oracles]]


== See also ==
== Code ==
==See Also==
*[https://daogovernanceframework.com/wiki/Arbitration_DAO Arbitration DAOs]
 
==Notes & References==

Revision as of 17:41, 13 July 2023

A Social DAO is a type of DAO that is not primarily devoted to serving the good of the society its members live in, with less emphasis on economic profit for its members--unlike primary DAOs. The value proposition of using a DAO structure is that decentralization naturally promotes equality, it add the transparency that assures accurate estimates of overhead to optimize efficiency, and it maintains an uncensorable history to promote a stable culture devoted to the DAO's goals.

Structure

??Two approaches:

  1. Pure Governance system with no money component (danger of nothing at stake)
  2. Partial money redistribution: Abstract the structure from Scholarship DAO,

Examples

  • Scholarship DAO
  • Poverty relief DAO
  • Policing DAOs
  • Social harmony
  • Hybrids
    • [DeNiM](Decentralized-News-Media) - The decentralized news media network.
    • Science Research Organizations
      • [Peer to Peer Technology](Peer-to-Peer-Technology) - The decentralized society for research, development, and sharing of P2P tools.
      • [Decentralized Governance](Decentralized-Governance) - The decentralized society for analysis and development of new approaches to the organization and guidance of decentralized networks.
    • Underwriting
    • Oracles

Code

See Also

Notes & References