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Decentralized autonomous organization

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A decentralized autonomous organization (DAO), sometimes labeled a decentralized autonomous corporation (DAC), is an organization represented by rules encoded as a computer program that is transparent, controlled by the organization members and not influenced by a central government.[1][2] A DAO's financial transaction record and program rules are maintained on a blockchain.[3]: 229 [4][5] The precise legal status of this type of business organization is unclear.[6]

A well-known example, intended for venture capital funding, was The DAO, which launched with $150 million in crowdfunding in June 2016, and was immediately hacked and drained of US$50 million in cryptocurrency.[7] This hack was reversed in the following weeks, and the money restored, via a hard fork of the Ethereum blockchain. This bailout was made possible by the Ethereum miners and clients switching to the new fork.[8]

Background

DAOs lead to decentralized economy. Tokens allow contribution to collective works, micropayments, and tracking metrics to allow algorithmic measures of contribution utility.

Decentralized autonomous organizations are typified by the use of blockchain technology to provide a secure digital ledger to track financial interactions across the internet, hardened against forgery by trusted timestamping and dissemination of a distributed database.[3]: 229 [4][9] This approach eliminates the need to involve a mutually acceptable trusted third party in a financial transaction, thus simplifying the transaction.[4] The costs of a blockchain-enabled transaction and of the associated data reporting may be substantially offset by the elimination of both the trusted third party and of the need for repetitive recording of contract exchanges in different records. For example, the blockchain data could, in principle and if regulatory structures permit it, replace public documents such as deeds and titles.[3]: 42 [4] In theory, a blockchain approach allows multiple cloud computing users to enter a loosely coupled peer-to-peer smart contract collaboration.[3]: 42 [10]

Daniel Larimer first proposed the concept of a "Decentralized Organized Company" in an article published on September 7, 2013[11] and implemented in Bitshares in 2014, EOSIO in 2018.[citation needed]

Vitalik Buterin proposed that after a DAO was launched, it might be organized to run without human managerial interactivity, provided the smart contracts were supported by a Turing complete platform in "DAOs, DACs, DAs and More: An Incomplete Terminology Guide". blog.ethereum.org. Ethereum, built on a blockchain and launched in 2015, has been described as meeting that Turing threshold, thus enabling such DAOs.[3]: 229 [12][13] Decentralized autonomous organizations aim to be open platforms where individuals control their identities and their personal data.[14]

List of DAOs

Name Token Type Use cases Network Launch Status Homepage
Dash (cryptocurrency)[15] [citation needed] Dash Governance Token governance Dash (cryptocurrency) Operational https://dash.org/
The DAO (organization) DAO Organization Venture capital Ethereum April 2016[16] Defunct late 2016 due to hack[17] -
Augur (software) [citation needed] REP Prediction Prediction market, Sports betting, Option (finance), Insurance Ethereum July 2018 Operational https://www.augur.net/
Steem [citation needed] Data distribution, Social media, Name services, Industrial March 2016 Operational https://steem.com
Aragon (project) [citation needed] Ethereum Operational

Issues

Social

Shareholder participation in DAOs can be problematic. For example, BitShares has seen a lack of voting participation, because it takes time and energy to consider proposals.[5]

The precise legal status of this type of business organization is unclear;[9] some similar approaches have been regarded by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission as illegal offers of unregistered securities.[6][18] Although unclear, a DAO may functionally be a corporation without legal status as a corporation: a general partnership.[19] This means potentially unlimited legal liability for participants, even if the smart contract code or the DAO's promoters say otherwise.[19] Known participants, or those at the interface between a DAO and regulated financial systems, may be targets for regulatory enforcement or civil actions.[19]

Security

The code of a given DAO will be difficult to alter once the system is up and running, including bug fixes that would be otherwise trivial in centralised code. Corrections for a DAO would require writing new code and agreement to migrate all the funds. Although the code is visible to all, it is hard to repair, thus leaving known security holes open to exploitation unless a moratorium is called to enable bug fixing.[20]

In 2016, a specific DAO, "The DAO", set a record for the largest crowdfunding campaign to date.[21][22] Researchers pointed out multiple issues in the code of The DAO. The operational procedure for The DAO allowed investors to withdraw at will any money that had not yet been committed to a project; the funds could thus deplete quickly.[5] Although safeguards aimed to prevent gaming the voting of shareholders to win investments,[6] there were a "number of security vulnerabilities".[23] These enabled an attempted large withdrawal of funds from The DAO to be initiated in mid-June 2016.[24][25][26] On the 20th of July 2016, the Ethereum blockchain was forked to bail out the original contract.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ Prusty, Narayan (27 Apr 2017). Building Blockchain Projects. Birmingham, UK: Packt. p. 9. ISBN 9781787125339.
  2. ^ The Decentralized Autonomous Organization and Governance Issues Regulation of Financial Institutions Journal: Social Science Research Network (SSRN). 5 December 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d e Vigna, P; Casey, MJ (January 27, 2015). The Age of Cryptocurrency: How Bitcoin and the Blockchain Are Challenging the Global Economic Order. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 9781250065636.
  4. ^ a b c d Hodson, H. (20 November 2013). "Bitcoin moves beyond mere money". New Scientist.
  5. ^ a b c "The DAO of accrue: A new, automated investment fund has attracted stacks of digital money". The Economist. 21 May 2016.
  6. ^ a b c Popper, N. (21 May 2016). "A Venture Fund With Plenty of Virtual Capital, but No Capitalist". New York Times.
  7. ^ Price, Rob (17 June 2016). "Digital currency Ethereum is cratering amid claims of a $50 million hack". Business Insider. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  8. ^ a b Vitalik Buterin (20 July 2016). "Hard Fork Completed". blog.ethereum.org. Ehereum Foundation. Retrieved 27 September 2018.
  9. ^ a b Wright, A; De Filippi, P. (March 10, 2015). "Decentralized Blockchain Technology and the Rise of Lex Cryptographia" (Document). {{cite document}}: Cite document requires |publisher= (help); Unknown parameter |ssrn= ignored (help)
  10. ^ Norta A. Creation of Smart-Contracting Collaborations for Decentralized Autonomous Organizations. 18 August 2015 Perspectives in Business Informatics Research. Volume 229 of the series Lecture Notes in Business Information Processing pp 3-17
  11. ^ "Over Paying for Security". Let's Talk Bitcoin.
  12. ^ Pangburn, DJ. (19 June 2015). "The Humans Who Dream Of Companies That Won't Need Us". FastCompany.
  13. ^ Evans, J. (1 August 2015). "Vapor No More: Ethereum Has Launched". www.techcrunch.com.
  14. ^ Deegan, P. (2014). "Chapter 14—The Relational Matrix: The Free and Emergent Organizations of Digital Groups and Identities". In Clippinger, JH; Bollier, D (eds.). From Bitcoin to Burning Man and Beyond: The Quest for Identity and Autonomy in a Digital Society. Amherst, Massachusetts: Institute for Institutional Innovation. pp. 160–176. ISBN 978-1-937146-58-0. creating an operational and autonomous Trust Framework [that can i]ntegrate with a secure discovery service in the form of a Decentralized Autonomous Organization ...
  15. ^ Stevenson, John (29 May 2018). "City academic makes link between cryptocurrency trading and machine learning". City, University of London.
  16. ^ "What is a DAO?".
  17. ^ Finley, Klint (2016-06-18). "Someone Just Stole $50 Million from the Biggest Crowdfunded Project Ever. (Humans Can't Be Trusted)". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved 2019-11-16.
  18. ^ "SEC Charges Bitcoin Entrepreneur With Offering Unregistered Securities". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. 3 June 2014.
  19. ^ a b c Levine, M. (17 May 2016). "Blockchain Company Wants to Reinvent Companies". Bloomberg View: Wall Street. Bloomberg News.
  20. ^ Peck, M. (28 May 2016). "Ethereum's $150-Million Blockchain-Powered Fund Opens Just as Researchers Call For a Halt". IEEE Spectrum. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers.
  21. ^ Vigna, P. (16 May 2016). "Chiefless Company Rakes In More Than $100 Million". Wall Street Journal.
  22. ^ Waters, R. (17 May 2016). "Automated company raises equivalent of $120M in digital currency". Financial Times.
  23. ^ Popper, N. (27 May 2016). "Paper Points Up Flaws in Venture Fund Based on Virtual Money". New York Times.
  24. ^ Popper, N. (17 June 2016). "Hacker May Have Taken $50 Million From Cybercurrency Project". New York Times.
  25. ^ Price, R (17 June 2016). "Digital currency Ethereum is cratering amid claims of a $50 million hack". Business Insider. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  26. ^ Cimpanu, C. (June 18, 2016). "DAO Ether Trading Platform to Shut Down Following Ongoing Cyber-Heist - DAO creator says platform is shutting down". Softpedia.