Lately I’ve been feeling more and more that DAO voting shouldn’t be seen as just "community democracy," but more often as a way to distribute incentives and rank positions... The first thing I look at in a proposal isn’t the vision anymore, but where the money is flowing, who has the authority, and whether the exit mechanism is clearly written.



Some proposals on the surface say they are optimizing processes, but a closer look reveals they are just reclaiming signing rights for key parameters, and maybe giving themselves a long-term subsidy; there are also those that say “reward contributors,” but how contributions are defined depends entirely on a small circle’s scoring, essentially turning voting into a threshold for getting paid.

These days, narratives around AI Agents and automated trading are heating up again, and proposals are starting to include “automated governance/automatic execution” features. It looks quite advanced, but I care more about the boundaries of authority: what contracts the bots can operate, who takes the blame if something goes wrong, whether there’s an emergency pause. The more on-chain interactions there are, the tighter the security needs to be; otherwise, in the end, it’s just “the proposal passed, but the wallet is gone.” I’m just following my take-profit line—let the excitement be excitement, and if it’s time to exit, I’ll exit.
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