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Pre-proposal: Community Stipends (v2)

Do you support this initiative?


  • Total voters
    11

rion

Active member
I made a second video presenting my vision for Community Stipends. The first video is linked in my previous forum post (that thread got a little off-topic so I thought I'd clean the slate).

This second video includes changes to the proposal cost and timeline, but covers the same basic idea as my first. I wanted to trim the duration down, but I wasn't very successful in that attempt. Feel free to watch the video at 1.5x speed to make it quicker. :)


The goal of Community Stipends is to promote (incentivize) more community contribution, and at the same time alleviate pressure from masternode operators. It would also help Dash become more decentralized.

Pretty much the same content is provided in this document (which may be a more succinct explanation):
https://github.com/dashcommunity/proposal-community-stipends/blob/master/proposal.md

Happy to answer any questions!

-Rion
 
I like how you mention the masternode operator cost and compare with the proposals themselves. I hadn't thought of quantifying that before

So with this, we would be essentially carving out a small portion of the budget and delegating the task of vetting smaller applications for funding, followup and some management to you.
My main question at this point for you is in what ways do you see this project as being separate from DashForce? Are you focusing on different categories of projects? Also, how much of the dash would be allocated towards paying out other projects and how much allocated towards paying you for performing the admin work? If not all of the dash allocated towards funding other projects is paid out, what do you intend to do with the amount remaining? You mentioned doing some more stuff on your own but I'm not really sure what that is

I do have some reservations because your previous funded proposal was not particularly successful, but I don't consider that a dealbreaker. Unless someone can convince me of a good reason not to support this, I don't think it would be consistent for me to strongly oppose the reduction of the proposal fee and also oppose this proposal at the same time. So currently I am leaning towards supporting this
 
I like how you mention the masternode operator cost and compare with the proposals themselves. I hadn't thought of quantifying that before

So with this, we would be essentially carving out a small portion of the budget and delegating the task of vetting smaller applications for funding, followup and some management to you.
My main question at this point for you is in what ways do you see this project as being separate from DashForce? Are you focusing on different categories of projects? Also, how much of the dash would be allocated towards paying out other projects and how much allocated towards paying you for performing the admin work? If not all of the dash allocated towards funding other projects is paid out, what do you intend to do with the amount remaining? You mentioned doing some more stuff on your own but I'm not really sure what that is

I do have some reservations because your previous funded proposal was not particularly successful, but I don't consider that a dealbreaker. Unless someone can convince me of a good reason not to support this, I don't think it would be consistent for me to strongly oppose the reduction of the proposal fee and also oppose this proposal at the same time. So currently I am leaning towards supporting this

Thanks for the thoughtful input, TroyDASH. Yes, that's a good summary of the proposal. The main differences between this and DashForce are as follows:
  • This program is offering relatively large stipends, rather than tips and small rewards
  • This program accepts custom proposals initiated by the applicants; DF gives their rewards according to DF's guidelines.
  • This program supports initiatives/projects/people that work over longer timeframes (one month of work, possibly renewing over time)
  • This program has nothing to do with anti-trolling, which I believe was the original vision of DF, and may still be the main focus.
  • This program supports software development; I don't believe DF does.
  • There are probably others as well, but that's a good list
The two admins will be paid 10 DASH/month, and will be expected to serve the community in other ways as well. I will provide a separate proposal for my "side project" shortly (which will also serve as an example to others), and will require the same from the other admin. Other applicants will be approved up to 10 DASH/month and must produce their deliverables before getting paid in full. I don't expect excess funds, but if we do have them they can be donated to the Dash Foundation, used as tips, or anything else people tell me they'd like, but I don't foresee having unused funds.

My previous project (https://github.com/dashcommunity), fulfilled all it's stated goals (correct me if I'm wrong), but I agree with you that it has not been embraced and used by the community as much as I expected. I believe that has been because it required more funding to be useful. I've continued to work on it, and still have larger plans for it. This proposal may help achieve that.

I personally think one can support both this project and lowering the proposal cost; If the fee reduction passes, then the network will likely see more proposals. Community Stipends can then help bring some of those smaller ones back off the treasury if desired. If the fee reduction fails, then Community Stipends are probably even more necessary. Ideally (IMO) the fee reduction passes, but it only gets implemented down the road when the price of Dash is even higher, say $200. I think 1 DASH is a good number to eventually land at. The value of 1 DASH will always vary, but if you're going to have an arbitrary number, may as well make it 1. Over time if Dash really gets cooking we can hold the 1DASH constant and do smaller stuff through subcontracting, like this proposal is suggesting.
 
I definitely like this idea. It is more or less the same as my "funded budget holders" preproposal, which got a reasonable reception. See here... https://www.dash.org/forum/threads/funded-budget-holders.13923/

As you say, we need a pilot to test it and get the details ironed out.

Do you like my suggestion that there should be broad categories with separate managers being responsible for categories they become experts in? Dash is in many countries used in many languages for many purposes.
 
The main differences between this and DashForce are as follows:

  • This program is offering relatively large stipends, rather than tips and small rewards
Not Correct. As far as the meetups and presentations Dash Force already does those but currently there are not that many so i would take that off my list as we already have that covered, surprised you would even keep it on there again as it is totally redundant and not needed.
Currently we are offering 2 or more Dash to anyone who puts on a once a month meetup or presentation and meets a few requirements to encourage best practices. However, anybody who tries any kind of meetup or presentation is rewarded for trying even if they have a small meetup that does not adhere to all the contest rules of best practices.

We are also offering up to 10 dash for anyone who puts on a weekly meetup or presentation.

At this time there is no real demand for that or members just want to do their own proposal that pays more than 10 Dash a month. I have had inquiries about weekly meetups/presentations but none have been submitted at this time but i do expect some in the next month or so, could be a lot or zero, you never know but we are there to help if needed.



- This program accepts custom proposals initiated by the applicants; DF gives their rewards according to DF's guidelines.

Not correct. See above.
Next month we will be hosting a youtube/podcast and Blog/article contest and will choose 3-5 winners for best video and 3-5 winners for best blog. We will promote all of them through the Dash Force News website and have a special page for the winners every month and will offer some of them monthly salaries after they prove themselves to the community.
We will also be able to promote them not only through our website site but with the help of our swarm team who post pro Dash content around the web on every major social media site.


  • This program supports initiatives/projects/people that work over longer timeframes (one month of work, possibly renewing over time)
There are area’s where this is needed right now. Namely software development and an ATM program of some kind as it seems we are going to be getting more and more of those.

The software project would need to be run by someone close to core just to make sure redundant efforts aren’t being made on software projects core has going but have not been announced for one reason or another. So it would need to be a trusted member that has earned the trust of the core team.

The ATM project could be run independently but may conflict with what core has been planning on the ATM front. Last I heard core had a plan for a DAO funded ATM network that would pay back ATM fee’s to the masternode network. It's a very exciting project that I have personally been looking forward to.



  • This program has nothing to do with anti-trolling, which I believe was the original vision of DF, and may still be.
Defending the community from disinformation is one part of what we do. We also do grassroots marketing, Various promotions/contest, Meetups and presentations and now a multimedia news and information website that complements all the contest we host and are planning to launch.



  • This program supports software development; I don't believe DF does.
Mostly Correct, software development is pretty much out of our scope but we do help smaller projects when needed like…
Pantas Sifir Math App Contest as DASH awareness program
https://www.dash.org/forum/threads/...-as-dash-awareness-program.13904/#post-119204


  • There are probably others as well, but that's a good list
See Above.



So really the two main areas that need addressing right now are Software projects like the one you are proposing to pay yourself for and a system to manage ATM projects so we don’t end up with 10-20 ATM proposals every month in the future. Someone would also need to follow up with all those projects and write reports on the progress etc.
However, there are already people in the community working on similar yet fully encompassing review committee type projects that are way more detailed and will be better organized to handle projects like that. I am helping consulate several people who are working on that but will remain an unpaid adviser.
Maybe you could be part of one of those jobs depending on your particular skill set and qualifications.

You say there are 5 projects to be funded in your proposal but you are planning on paying yourself 10 Dash to be one of them so it is really just 4. If you are going to be an administrator paying yourself 10 Dash you should recuse yourself from paying yourself for a still unknown software project that may or may not be needed or wanted. If you did recuse yourself from being an administrator there should be no obligation for your project to get funded over someone else. Either way that seems to create a conflict of interest and one reason i could not fully support this proposal last month when you approached me about running it or funding it or whatever. I felt you thought I would be obligated to choose your software project that you are still not open about disclosing, I was not comfortable with that.

One last thing, I still don’t understand is how this helps with decentralization as you claim. It would centralize several projects under you and you would decide who gets funded and who does not as you said in your video. There is not necessarily anything bad about that as long as you did a good job but it does centralize project development, not decentralize it. So let's be honest about that.
What qualifies you to decide who gets funded and who does not? Contest and competitions are a much better way of going about things if you want the best of the best to rise to the top in a truly decentralized fashion. Centralized planing can work but free market based decentralized solutions are better IMO.
 
First of all, I’m sorry for you, but the last thread didn't really end up well, a lot of drama about private conversations and so on. I'm not saying that it's your fault but, IMO, a skilled leader worth of being responsible for a Dash project, should have not fell in that trap.


Second of all, as far as I’m concerned, the proposition is trying to centralize something that does need to given the current state of the network where Masternode are not flooded in any way (other way round). And I don’t believe we need to anticipate anything as any organization tends to centralization. So, it’s easy to implement in any case. That’s the only one thing that world do. It’s not for nothing we are the first DAO.


That’s why, in that sense, I would like us as community to keep thinking about how we can do stuff differently instead of thinking, whenever we scale, we need to centralize. I'm not saying we won't need to eventually, I'm saying we could try harder to carry on the work that has been done so far.


Regarding your demonstration about what a proposal cost the network. Sure, it’s a big number but we should not forget that the money it costs the network is inherent to decentralization.


As we say in French, we cannot have the butter and the money from the butter. Meaning we cannot have it both ways, can't have the cost and time efficiency of centralization and be decentralized.

Decentralization comes at a cost. This forum is also a proof: how many discussions, how many people spending time on it? How many topic discussed twice or thrice (which this one is about to be)? I'm a translator and I can tell you that sometimes happened that thing got translated twice. It doesn't mean it's ok, it just means that's a side effect of decentralization that we can control up to a certain point.


So, what? Everything in life is not about productiveness. In Japan, so many talks, preparation, discussion, etc., that you would have the impression that the project will never take place. However, when the decision is made, everything has been so well planned that it's done in no time. (in western world, we'll tend to take a quick decision and then adjust as we go, loosing time. but in the end, the project will be finished in the same timing as Japanese) – I’m not sure that I get my point through, maybe somebody will find a better metaphor.


My point is it's ok to discuss, it's ok to take time, it's ok to try to find new unconventional solutions.


My two cents (already in informal discussion in this thread) to help keeping a balance between decentralisation and not flooding the Masternodes : as we scale up, we could have a kind of crowdfunding tool to fund proposal cost would be nice.


Whatever the fees there always will be some ideas that will be excluded (even if you have the best idea in the world, you might not be able to risk losing those X dollars on a proposal as those X dollars might represent a tenth of your wealth). However, if it's truly a good idea, other wealthier people might want risk it for you (above all if we are talking about structural or governance proposal that don't bring the proposer any money).


If an idea is good, one should be able to promote it around the free channel and get donation from people to be able to submit proposal. If the amount is not reached, everybody is funded back. If it does reach, proposal is submitted. If it passes, everybody is funded back. If not everybody share the loss.
 
In the interest of saving time I'll be blunt, but please don't take that to be rude. Just trying to maximize efficiency in figuring out how you will best approach this proposal, so I'll ask no-nonsense hypotheticals that any good proposal should have no problem answering.

(DISCLAIMER: I didn't watch the new video. I doubt many have. I'm going on just what I've read, and you should assume the MNOs will do the same since not everyone is in a place where they can sit through a long video rather than quickly reading something)

How does this improve efficiency? It would seem that the main goal of this proposal is to increase efficiency by taking care of vetting and managing smaller projects instead of the masternodes themselves. The problem being, with such a seemingly general-purpose project, the MNOs will have to read through everything you've approved or shot down. Now instead of looking through dozens of minor proposals themselves, they'll have to look through those same proposals, your as well, and not have any direct vote on specific projects. Unless there's some detail I missed, it looks like either an additional bureaucratic step that saves no work on the MNO's part, or just a significant amount of trust increased, centralized around a lone individual. Really, it looks like what this does is give you the voting power of several masternodes, as well as their rewards (or more), and you don't even have to stake any Dash. Please correct me if I'm wrong, this is just what I gathered from watching the video the first time around, and from reading this post.

What are your goals and criteria? Remember, everything needs to be as specific as possible while still being useful. Other than the (assumed) efficiency goal above, I don't see one. I don't see a category, a mission, anything of that nature. Even if it's a really general-purpose project, there should be a list of criteria you'll apply to projects: demonstrable value increase for Dash, professional record of the applicant, trusted public identity or pseudonymous identity, dollar amount range, timeframe range, etc. etc. etc. As Yogi Berra once said, careful because if you don't know where you're going, you might not get there.

Why would anyone trust you? At its heart, this proposal is asking MNOs to trust you (and pay you) to manage a good chunk of the voting process for them. Why you? Do you have a record of trustworthiness in the community? Are you a professional project manager? Where's your resume/LinkedIn? What qualifications do you have for this job?

*Better solution: Purpose-specific sub-DAO projects* Instead, I would encourage more projects like the Dash Force (of which I'm a proud member) with a specific goal in mind: community support/media/narrative defense, non-Core development/integrations, tech support, etc. That way the DAO can hire professionals who are specialists in their field, and instead of having to read through everything they do in detail, they can just look at the general mission and ask "How are we doing in this area?" If everything's going well, they can keep funding the project. Think about the Dash Force example: if MNOs see a bunch of Dash Force News articles everywhere, and everywhere online they see Dash is well-represented ("Man those Dash fans are everywhere!"), they know to keep funding us. They don't have to hunt down every individual project we may or may not have been involved with just to see if they go their money's worth.

There ya have it. Again, sorry for the bluntness in the interests of clarity and time saving. If the proposal is solid, you should have absolutely no issue addressing each of these questions/points. Good luck! :)
 
I definitely like this idea. It is more or less the same as my "funded budget holders" preproposal, which got a reasonable reception. See here... https://www.dash.org/forum/threads/funded-budget-holders.13923/

As you say, we need a pilot to test it and get the details ironed out.

Do you like my suggestion that there should be broad categories with separate managers being responsible for categories they become experts in? Dash is in many countries used in many languages for many purposes.

I just read your proposal idea. We are definitely thinking along the same lines. There are some small differences in how we are proposing to improve the system, but we're working on the same challenge, and I think we can work together on this. I agree with you that specialties should emerge. I think we have to start more general and work towards specialization.

The main differences between this and DashForce are as follows

....

So really the two main areas that need addressing right now are Software projects like the one you are proposing to pay yourself for and a system to manage ATM projects so we don’t end up with 10-20 ATM proposals every month in the future. Someone would also need to follow up with all those projects and write reports on the progress etc.
However, there are already people in the community working on similar yet fully encompassing review committee type projects that are way more detailed and will be better organized to handle projects like that. I am helping consulate several people who are working on that but will remain an unpaid adviser.
Maybe you could be part of one of those jobs depending on your particular skill set and qualifications.

You say there are 5 projects to be funded in your proposal but you are planning on paying yourself 10 Dash to be one of them so it is really just 4. If you are going to be an administrator paying yourself 10 Dash you should recuse yourself from paying yourself for a still unknown software project that may or may not be needed or wanted. If you did recuse yourself from being an administrator there should be no obligation for your project to get funded over someone else. Either way that seems to create a conflict of interest and one reason i could not fully support this proposal last month when you approached me about running it or funding it or whatever. I felt you thought I would be obligated to choose your software project that you are still not open about disclosing, I was not comfortable with that.

One last thing, I still don’t understand is how this helps with decentralization as you claim. It would centralize several projects under you and you would decide who gets funded and who does not as you said in your video. There is not necessarily anything bad about that as long as you did a good job but it does centralize project development, not decentralize it. So let's be honest about that.
What qualifies you to decide who gets funded and who does not? Contest and competitions are a much better way of going about things if you want the best of the best to rise to the top in a truly decentralized fashion. Centralized planing can work but free market based decentralized solutions are better IMO.

Thanks for your response, Mastermined. It helped me understand better what DF is doing, and helped me distill and refine my own vision, and how it compares to yours.

It seems you have one main concern: redundancy. Let's assume the "worst case" scenario in terms of redundancy - that our projects are doing the exact same thing. In that case yes, we would have completely redundant projects. Is this a bad thing? I'm coming from the perspective that multiple parallel efforts are not only required, but healthy. How can we achieve decentralization without multiple people working on the same overall goals? (rhetorical questions)

I consider both of our efforts decentralizing in nature. They are both providing avenues to work for Dash. Let's start with the assumption for a moment that people want to contribute to Dash, but are neither working for Core nor submitting their own proposals (most people fall in this category, for varying reasons). People currently have two choices, submit a network proposal (very decentralized), or work for Core (very centralized). Both are challenging, which leads people to do neither. Your project was the first option that people had to find a middle ground. It improved the landscape for working for Dash. Before, they had two options, treasury contractor, or Core contractor. Your project gave a third option, work for DF. Working for DF is decentralizing if the likely alternative is working for Core. It's only centralizing if the likely alternative is putting in your own proposal and working directly for the MNOs (with your own treasury proposal). So, whether adding more work options is centralizing or decentralizing depends entirely on the likely alternative of the contributors. I am arguing (based on the trends I'm seeing and foreseeing) that people are not likely (and will be even less likely in the future) to work independently as the proposal fee rises. You can combat this in two ways. Reduce the proposal fee, and/or increase the number of options for people to work. I support both, because compared to the status quo trends, both will yield greater decentralization. From this perspective, both of our projects are decentralizing. If adding a third option to work for Dash (e.g. the addition of DF) was an improvement, which I believe it was, then adding a fourth option (e.g. the addition of community stipends) continues that trend of improvement.

All of that said, I do not believe our programs are exactly the same. My emphasis is bottom-up proposals - people submit their ideas of what they'd like to do for Dash, just like the existing treasury system expects and operates, but without the hurdle of the high proposal fee. The work duration/load and amounts paid will reflect stipends rather than tips. DF may move more towards this kind of a model as well, to which I say, great! Rather than discouraging others from doing this exact kind of thing, I encourage it. We can dispassionately let the MNOs decide if they like this idea through their voting. Actively fighting off new entrants seems to be an unhealthy precedent to set.

First of all, I’m sorry for you, but the last thread didn't really end up well, a lot of drama about private conversations and so on. I'm not saying that it's your fault but, IMO, a skilled leader worth of being responsible for a Dash project, should have not fell in that trap....

Thank you for your comments, Leonidas. I looked at your comments in the other thread, and I think you are on to something. I like the idea of a crowdfunding tool customized for masternode proposals. This is exactly the kind of thing that could be funded through a custom community stipend, like I'm trying to facilitate.

If I've understood correctly, you too have concerns that my proposal will be centralizing, rather than decentralizing. Could you please look over my response to Mastermined above and follow up with any additional questions. I tried to explain this in my video but apparently I didn't do a good enough job. I tried to boil it down more above, but let me know if something still isn't clear.

I found myself agreeing with almost everything you said, particularly that we don't need to try to centralize things, but rather, that that is the general nature of things to centralize. I think we have to be vigilant to push in the direction of decentralization. You may still disagree that my proposal will actually achieve that, but my intention is very clear that I wish to decentralize.

I found this image very helpful to conceptualizing (de)centralization. We have three kinds of networks. A centralized system is very efficient. This is the top-down (or more accurately here, the center-out) model where there's point or origin on which all other points depend. This is efficient, but very prone to attack. Then we have a de-centralized network where there are nodes of relative greater importance, but there is no identifiable single "center" of the network as a whole. Then we have a distributed network. There is no center, and all points are generally equal with many connections to other points. This is ideal in terms of mitigating attacks due to single points of failure, but it's very complex and often inefficient.

Applied to Dash, a centralized network would be one in which Core got all the funding and paid subcontractors from their pool. A distributed network might represent the case where all work were performed by individuals putting in proposals for each scope of work they pursued. And a de-centralized network might be something in between where there are prime- and sub-contractor relationships. For better or worse, Dash is currently quite centralized. Close to 80% of the funding is funneled through Core. This produces efficient work, but it's more vulnerable to attack. At this point the only way to move towards decentralized funding is for more people to take DF's example and set up nodes of funding separate from the Core team. The more people/groups that do this the more our system will approach a healthy distribution. Our current makeup might be okay for now, but we should start heading in the right direction. Eventually I would hope that Core would start using less than 80% of the budget, but in order for that to happen new groups need to step up and compete. This "competition" is not adversarial or malicious, nor is it "redundant"; it's necessary for de-centralization. It's collaborative competition, and it's very healthy, especially considering the status quo and the trends.

I think I might be preaching to the choir here. Based on your comment I suspect you understand this stuff already. I just wanted to try to show how my proposal tries to achieve our (I believe) shared goals.

In the interest of saving time I'll be blunt, but please don't take that to be rude. Just trying to maximize efficiency in figuring out how you will best approach this proposal, so I'll ask no-nonsense hypotheticals that any good proposal should have no problem answering.

(DISCLAIMER: I didn't watch the new video. I doubt many have. I'm going on just what I've read, and you should assume the MNOs will do the same since not everyone is in a place where they can sit through a long video rather than quickly reading something)....

How does this improve efficiency?...

What are your goals and criteria? ...

Why would anyone trust you? ...

*Better solution: Purpose-specific sub-DAO projects* ...

There ya have it. Again, sorry for the bluntness in the interests of clarity and time saving. If the proposal is solid, you should have absolutely no issue addressing each of these questions/points. Good luck! :)

DesertLynx, I'll be blunt too. I like your work. A lot. See, blunt doesn't always have to be negative or skeptical. :) Really though, thanks for being blunt. I would be more offended if you weren't. Who likes to be treated like a softy? I don't need sugar coating.

Watch the damn video if you want to have an effective counter-argument :) If you don't have time for the video, you could have read the document that I prepared, linked to in my original post, and explicitly described as being a more succinct way to get pretty much the same content as the video. I've commented to others above about efficiency vs. de-centralization. The are somewhat competing goals, so MNOs have to strike a balance. My motivation (goals) are spelled out in the video, the document, and comments above. I addressed the trust issue near the end of in my video (escrow funds with a trusted community member until I've delivered results, unfortunately there's no way to do it at the protocol level, so we deal with trust until that's improved). To briefly answer your questions: Why me? Because I'm one of the only ones with the balls to submit such a proposal I guess. Record of trust in the community? I'm trying to build one. Professional project management skills? Yes. I have been an energy efficiency engineer for almost a decade, which involved a lot of project management and subcontracting. LinkedIn? I have a profile, but I don't actively manage it, relative waste of time in my estimation. Qualifications? Yes, I'm qualified.

Regarding being "purpose-specific": I'm not opposed to moving in the direction of specialization, but I'm not going to come out of the gate thinking I know everything, and know what projects people want to do, and dictate exactly what the "best practices" are. I'm focussing on bottom-up innovation, but I'm willing to give ideas, direction, and general guidance or responses when asked (for specific things by specific people). The fact that you, and many others don't have the time to watch the video or read the document tells me I've probably actually given too much information at this point, not too little. I don't blame people for not putting time into my proposal, really. People are busy. I tried to slim down the information to the basics in order to respect people's time, not hide details. I wouldn't assume that I don't have more information than I'm subjecting my audience to.

So, people are generally asking to be treated the same way they treat others, so I'm guessing you appreciated my blunt reply. I'm usually a little more cordial and less blunt with people whom I have just met for the first time, but hey, I'm just trying to speak your language. And to bring this chiasmus to a close I'll reemphasize, I like your writing, and I look forward to more of it in the future, long live Dash Force! :)
 
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The goal of Community Stipends is to promote (incentivize) more community contribution, and at the same time alleviate pressure from masternode operators. It would also help Dash become more decentralized.

Who decides the stipends? Who decides which of the various relatively small "off-treasury" projects will be funded? You are? And how this promotes decentralization?

We used to have 50 dash available, and we used to let 4000 masternodes to decide what to do with them. And now you want the 4000 masternodes to allow only you to decide how to spend those 50 dash. Is this decentralization? IMHO it is centralization. 4000 used to decide what to do with this 50 dash , and now only one person or a commitee decide.

If you want your argument related to decentralization to be rational, in your proposal you have to introduce a commitee of more than 4000 members , which will be in charge of deciding what to do with those 50 dash.

Otherwise, please remove your argument related to decentralization.
 
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Honestly, it doesn't seem to me like the most refined/focused proposal we've had, and I completely hear the arguments on the other side. But from the perspective of risk/reward, I would be willing to take a gamble on this. I don't think rion is going to just scam us out of the funds, but with that being said, since he is still trying to build up a positive reputation, I think most likely this would have a better chance of passing if we do as he suggested, and have somebody more well established help out to escrow the funds and release them as needed, instead of paying it all up front directly to rion.

We do need to strike a balance with efficiency and growth. Right now especially because of the recent price appreciation, I feel that efficiency isn't as much of a priority. We can afford to do some trial and error with the budget, as long as we keep in mind to limit our possibility for error to small errors.
 
Hmm, I'm now leaning towards not putting in the proposal.

Several newer people have shown support, but it seems I"m getting the most pushback from those who have been around here the longest (particularly those affiliated with Dash Force). Given the probability that older members have the most masternode votes, it's probably not wise to proceed.

I'm confident that this program would lead to greater inclusion and decentralization, but I should probably back up and take more time explaining my reasoning before submitting.

Happy to continue the conversation and work towards submitting this later if I see minds changing.
 
Hmm, I'm now leaning towards not putting in the proposal.

Several newer people have shown support, but it seems I"m getting the most pushback from those who have been around here the longest (particularly those affiliated with Dash Force). Given the probability that older members have the most masternode votes, it's probably not wise to proceed.

I'm confident that this program would lead to greater inclusion and decentralization, but I should probably back up and take more time explaining my reasoning before submitting.

Happy to continue the conversation and work towards submitting this later if I see minds changing.

I think your idea is not so bad if you include the decentralization factor.

You should ask a small amount of DASH from the masternodes, and implement an alternative voting system different to the current timocracy-plutocracy of Dash. That way you may prove that your alternative governance system is better than the current one. And I bet that you will confirm Plato. Plato describes five regimes (of which four are unjust). Timocracy is listed as the first "unjust" regime.

Not all the Dash ecosystem should be governed by Timocracy. The Dash timocrats should give some small space to other governance systems, in order for them to prove their effectiveness. The research and the experimentation of various government systems will lead to progress.

In order to prove that timocracy is a flawed regime, I have already challenged the masternodes to accept all actors to vote. Asking a small amount of money from the masternodes and prove that by using an alternative governance system things may go better, this is an alternative way of proving that timocracy is flawed.
 
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I like this post. Good job with the replies, Rion. I can tell you're thinking through some of the problems facing Dash's treasury scaling, and that you've got some principles behind your method. Your proposals all seem to be tied into the idea of encouraging more community development. I'd really like the see more technical innovation coming from the community, and not being lost to starting new competitor coins.

Dash needs people like you right now, to act as escrow agents and project managers, who get allocated an amount of Dash each month to seek out and oversee more development projects from the Dash community. For smaller proposals, it's quite expensive and risky to propose on the network now. And for us masternodes, we worry about giving away cash upfront to developers, without a lot of guarantee of delivery. The proposal system is a little backwards in this way. To that point, this would work for larger proposals as well -- hold back funding by a trusted 3rd party, until delivery is actually made, then pay.

How to get trusted and competent managers is a question. But we have to put out funding sometime, in order to find such who can do this job. The consistency of your ideas, and the way you've stuck with it through several iterations now, is good enough for me to try you out at this stage and for the amount you are seeking. Should you propose, I would vote yes.
 
I may not be entirely on topic but the trust issue is big and it would be nice to see someone offering to escrow. The problem is then they are taking on risk to their credibility if they make a mistake. Mistakes will be made but the goal is to limit them.

I'm trying to submit more of a advertising proposal where they organization needs to get paid and there is no point for me to be in the middle except to convert the dash.

Unfortunately all the most well known people in dash are very busy with many projects.

But rapid growth means that soon there will be far more new people making proposals then established people. What happens if the dash community goes through a 10x growth rate in 3 months..

So here I am submitting a proposal for the dash community that *might* cover my cost (90%+ is a event fee to a non-profit) and i wan't to do it as a contribution to the community but getting solutions to credibility/conversions and escrow problems is hard.

I can now totally understand why someone new could feel defeated before even submitting a proposal.
 
I can now totally understand why someone new could feel defeated before even submitting a proposal.
Agreed. There are 4000+ masternodes, and far more people on the pre-proposal pages. You never know who you are talking to and everyone has a different opinion. Wouldn't it be nice if one guy was just "in charge". Oh well, that's decentralised systems for you. TBH the reason I like dash is that it has a governance system. God knows what we would do without it. Somewhere in Dash I expect there are people who work in a more focussed way.
 
Hey everyone. Thanks again for your comments and questions.

I just put in a treasury proposal. It's a simple governance question (along with my editorial recommendation). Lets discuss it in Slack or dashcentral. Thanks!

https://www.dashcentral.org/p/scale-treasury-through-co-ops

@demo, I'd be interested to see if the video I made and linked to in my proposal helps lessen your concerns about (my suggestions in this thread leading to) decentralization.
@ghowdy, Thanks for your comments. I agree that escrow agents are a big need given the treasury's current state. If things go the direction I'm suggesting in my new proposal there will less of a need for an actual escrow agent, since co-op organizers will be the trusted agent, but we need 3rd party do-nothing-except-hold-funds escrow agents as things stand now.
@ampp, the 'feeling defeated before you even submit a proposal' issue is exactly what I'm trying to alleviate with my proposal.
@Kevin Stalker, I agree that crowds and uncertainty of who you're talking to is a problem on the forum. I have some other ideas about how to fix that. More on that later. In any case, we can't simply succumb to centralization. Decentralization at all costs.
 
OK - I agree. You will notice that in my Funded Budget Holders idea I propose trusted agents in the same way you seem to be thinking. In my proposal each budget can be voted up or down each month according to how the masternodes feel it is performing.
 
Yep. Looks like we're on the same page. Did you ever submit your proposal to the treasury?
 
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