By Adriana Hamacher, Matt Hussey and Stephen Graves
5 min read
Decentralized autonomous organizations, or DAOs, have no company HQ, replace traditional hierarchies with flat management structures, are governed by crypto holders, and are built on rules that are automatically enforced on a blockchain.
Advocates of DAOs claim that they'll radically alter the way businesses are run. They're already hard at work; several DAOs have already been launched, and they've created some pretty cool things.
A DAO is an organization where control is spread out across the participants, instead of being built on a top-down hierarchy.
A DAO can be seen as operating like a machine, with the job it is instructed to carry out determined by pre-written smart contracts.
A community can adapt a DAO and program it according to its own goals.
Jademont Zheng, Waterdrip Capital
The DAO was the earliest example of a DAO. It was created by Slock.it and was built on the Ethereum network. Its code was open source, which anyone could contribute to.
The DAO was designed to work as a venture fund platform for crypto projects. A pitch would be made and anyone with DAO tokens could vote on projects to award funding. However, The DAO never made it to liftoff.
On June 17, 2016, a hacker managed to exploit a few lines of code allowing the move of 3.6 million ETH, worth $70 million. Yet the funds were moved to a “Child DAO” and couldn’t be moved for 28 days, giving the Ethereum community time to make a fix.
They made a hard fork to the chain now known as Ethereum, leaving the old fork, Ethereum Classic, behind. During this fork, they re-wrote the blockchain so that the hack never happened, meaning the blockchain was no longer immutable.
Stephan Tual, founder of Slock.it
Development on DAOs continued, but out of the limelight. Projects such as Aragon, DAOstack, DAOHaus, and Colony learned key lessons from the original DAO, and now build and run DAOs for some of the largest decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols. The 2020 decentralized finance (DeFi) boom brought a fresh wave of interest to the DAOs that underpinned many of the leading projects.
DAOs have seen a big revival of interest in the last few years, with hundreds of developers working on technical innovations, improvements to governance mechanisms, and voting solutions.
Decentralized autonomous organisations have been particularly active in the creative industries, with DAOs forming to create "headless" fashion brands, perfumes and filmmaking communities. In many cases, these creative DAOs retain an element of centralization; for example, while filmmaking DAO Decentralized Pictures allows token holders to vote for a shortlist of film projects to win funding, the final decision on which project receives the award is made by a board of judges.
Enthusiasts believe that DAOs will soon become more sophisticated. Trends include anonymity, progressive decentralization, and better incentives towards participation. Future DAOs may employ prediction markets, and begin voting and acting as delegators in other DAOs. Decrypt itself has become a founding member of PubDAO, a decentralized crypto news wire that aims to be a first step towards a decentralized, collaborative publishing ecoystem.
Will DAOs start to change the way that companies operate and raise money? Soon you too might be a member of a DAO, voting on the right way for your business to move forward, without having a boss telling you what to do.
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