TL;DR
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Wyoming simply grew to become a authorized protected haven for DAOs (aka ‘communities as companies’) — which suggests we could be seeing a DAO increase within the coming years.
Full Story
Let’s say you’re a part of a web-based neighborhood…
Let’s make it one thing regular like, idk, a closed neighborhood for followers of singer-songwriter Natalie Imbruglia.
No? Okay. Positive. Let’s fake its a mountaineering membership (regular sufficient?).
Say this mountaineering membership begins getting requests from manufacturers wanting to advertise their items to members…the neighborhood collectively decides:
“Certain, why not, we’ll take some low cost codes and a bit of money…however on that final bit — how will we disperse the funds pretty?”
One choice would to be create a Decentralized Autonomous Group (DAO), aka an automatic piggy financial institution for the neighborhood — with set guidelines, eg:
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You turn out to be a moderator → you get rewarded with DAO tokens.
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You share new trails/routes → you get rewarded with DAO tokens.
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You give useful responses within the share discussion board → DAO tokens.
The concept being that these tokens reward lively members, and might be transformed into fiat money, or held / used to vote on the way to spend the neighborhood funds (the extra tokens you maintain, the extra votes you get).
Sounds superior proper? Solely downside is…
Authorized frameworks for DAOs are rickety at finest.
Some jurisdictions may even try to take your candy lil’ mountaineering neighborhood (or Natalie Imbruglia fan membership) to court docket for promoting unregistered securities (aka unregistered public shares in an organization).
Right here’s the cool a part of this story:
Wyoming’s Gov. Mark Gordon simply signed a invoice into state regulation that provides to rising codes for DAOs, which have already been cleared to determine themselves as limited-liability companies there.
Translation: Wyoming simply grew to become a protected haven (or ‘oasis’ as a16z have put it) for DAOs.
We LOVE to see it.