Description
Context:
Sharing some feedback and suggestions on the Constitution. Some of these points aim to offer additional perspectives and spark further consideration for both the Constitution and GovDAO.
General:
- What happens in the case of an exploit or emergency (not necessarily the steps but what should the Constitution enable)?
- Are gnomes’ rights and tokens automatically recognized in forks, or do forks inherit constitutional obligations?
- Should there be anything in place for cross-fork (gno.land <> fork or fork <> fork) governance?
By Section:
Preamble
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The aspirational language ("transparent, innovative, decentralized world") lacks binding ties to operational mechanisms. Suggestion to anchor ideals to structural guarantees:
Decentralization shall be enforced through immutable on-chain governance (Article 4), censorship resistance via cryptographic primitives (e.g., abc, xyz cryptography), and transparency via public auditability of DAO decisions (Article 2.1)."
Section 1: Fundamental Principles
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Absence of enumerated and immutable principles can create ambiguity in constitutional supremacy. Suggestion to codify non-derogable principles, such as:
1. Protocol neutrality: No entity may alter user-owned assets or restrict permissionless participation. 2. Subsidiarity: Governance decisions must reside at the lowest feasible DAO hierarchy level. 3. Immutable due process: No penalty may be imposed without on-chain, community-ratified slashing conditions (see Article 3).
Section 2: General Mission and Objectives
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"Authentic content" risks subjective enforcement which invites governance capture. Suggestion to define via cryptographic primitives if possible. Here is a hypothetical example:
Content authenticity is verified through decentralized attestation networks (e.g., a reputation scheme) and multi-validator consensus (≥3 independent signers).
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"Censorship resilience" lacks technical specificity. Suggestion to include more details, for instance:
Resilience is achieved through distributed storage mechanisms (example), validator set rotation (mechanism), and forkability guarantees (Article 4.3)."
Article 1: The GovDAO
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"Known identities" could exclude pseudonymous but high-value contributors. Suggestion:
GovDAO membership requires pseudonymity-compatible credentials: cryptographic proof of contributions (e.g., GPG-signed Git commits) and staked GNOT (≥1% of circulating supply)."
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Unilateral Sub-DAO dissolution undermines subsidiarity. Suggestion for checks:
Dissolution requires (a) GovDAO Supermajority (≥67%), (b) 14-day public challenge period, and (c) arbitration by a randomly selected GNOTDAO panel."
Article 2: DAOs and Sub-DAOs
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Parent DAO override via Simple Majority may come off as a centralization design choice instead of a safeguard. Could be addressed by focussing on Sub-DAO autonomy:
Parent DAOs may only intervene if Sub-DAOs violate constitutional principles (Section 1) or threaten protocol security (e.g., consensus-layer exploits).
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No default participation threshold (quorum) enables minority decisions. A hypothetical example:
Proposals require 33% Council participation. If unmet, voting extends by 48 hours; persistent quorum failure triggers automatic dismissal and deposit forfeiture.
Article 3: Citizen Rights
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"Uphold integrity" lacks behavioral specificity. Can strengthen with incentive alignment. For instance:
Integrity violations (e.g., plagiarism, Sybil attacks) trigger progressive slashing of staked GNOT, calibrated to offense severity (see Slashing Schedule, Appendix B).
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Inflation proposals bypass proactive GNOTDAO veto power. There should be an economic safeguard, such as:
Inflation changes require concurrent GovDAO Supermajority (≥67%) and GNOTDAO Simple Majority (>50%). GNOTDAO may veto post-approval within 14 days via 60% vote."
Article 4: Governance
Procedural Shortcomings
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40% threshold enables capture by minority stakeholders. What about tiered legitimacy:
Quorum escalates with proposal impact: 40% (routine), 60% (constitutional amendments), 75% (treasury allocations >100k GNOT).
Chain Governance
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"Alignment with vision" criteria lack objectivity. This can be meritocratic. Hypothetical example:
Validators are elected via (specific scheme) voting by GNOT holders, conditioned on (1) ≥99% historical uptime, (2) third-party security audits, and (3) public key rotation every 6 months.
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Similar to the centralization interpretation above, the GovDAO unilateral assessment risks interpreting as favoritism. It can be meritocratic:
Contributions are scored via plural voting (1 contributor = 1 vote) among verified DAO members, weighted by GNOT staked in reputation contracts.
Article 5: Amendments
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No timeline for resolving constitutional conflicts. There could be something like:
ArbitrationDAO must convene within 7 days of dispute and issue binding rulings within 21 days. Failure annuls the contested amendment.
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90% threshold risks stagnation (deadlock). What about delegating voting power:
Unbonded GNOT holders may delegate amendment voting power to GovDAO members, weighted by their staked GNOT