DAO
También conocido como: Decentralized Autonomous Organization
A community-governed organization run by smart contracts and token-based voting, with no central leadership or traditional corporate structure.
A DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization) is an organization where rules, treasury management, and decision-making are encoded in smart contracts and governed by token holders through on-chain voting. DAOs have no CEO, board of directors, or corporate hierarchy.
How DAOs Work:
- Members hold governance tokens that represent voting power
- Anyone (or qualified members) can submit proposals
- Proposals go through discussion, then on-chain voting
- Approved proposals are executed automatically by smart contracts
- Treasury funds are managed by multisig wallets or governance contracts
Types of DAOs:
| Type | Purpose | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Protocol DAOs | Govern DeFi protocols | Uniswap, Aave, MakerDAO |
| Investment DAOs | Pool capital for investments | The LAO, MetaCartel Ventures |
| Social DAOs | Membership communities | Friends With Benefits |
| Service DAOs | Provide services for hire | RaidGuild, LexDAO |
| Collector DAOs | Acquire assets collectively | PleasrDAO, ConstitutionDAO |
DAO Tooling: - Snapshot: Off-chain gasless voting platform - Tally: On-chain governance interface - Gnosis Safe: Multi-signature treasury management - Aragon: DAO creation and management framework
Governance Challenges: - Voter Apathy: Often less than 5-10% of tokens participate in votes - Plutocracy: Wealthy holders dominate decisions - Coordination: Slow decision-making compared to centralized organizations - Legal Ambiguity: DAO legal status varies by jurisdiction - Security: Governance attacks through flash loans or token accumulation
Legal Evolution: Wyoming passed the first DAO LLC law in 2021, followed by other jurisdictions. The Marshall Islands recognizes DAOs as legal entities. Despite progress, most DAOs operate in legal gray areas regarding liability and regulatory compliance.
Historical Note: "The DAO" was the first major DAO on Ethereum in 2016. A smart contract bug was exploited for $60M, leading to the controversial Ethereum/Ethereum Classic hard fork.
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Explora cómo DAO se aplica a estas criptomonedas con un análisis STRICT detallado.