It's always hard to figure out what people actually want from decentralized governance.
The upcoming Unification vote will be:
- proposed and executed entirely onchain
- subject to the existing, public procedure that has been used successfully for Uniswap Governance for the past 4-5 years
- 100% able to fail if the vote fails or quorum is not reached
The code of the UNI token, which defines Uniswap Governance, is unowned and immutable, forever.
Upcoming changes to fee parameters or the addition of new fee mechanisms will require another Governance vote.
So I'm not quite sure what @lemiscate would prefer (and whether or not that's even possible, since Uniswap Governance is immutable), or how it's much different from Aave, which has a similar system of grants (including to the corporate entity that invented the core protocols), purely onchain governance, and service providers. I think of the Uniswap and Aave tokens as references for governance precisely because they're immutable.
To me it seems like this is working exactly as intended? If someone opposes this proposal they are free to campaign with delegates and tokenholders to vote No. If a majority vote no, or a quorum is not reached, the proposal will fail -- that is guaranteed by immutable and public smart contract code.
3,578
11
本頁面內容由第三方提供。除非另有說明,OKX 不是所引用文章的作者,也不對此類材料主張任何版權。該內容僅供參考,並不代表 OKX 觀點,不作為任何形式的認可,也不應被視為投資建議或購買或出售數字資產的招攬。在使用生成式人工智能提供摘要或其他信息的情況下,此類人工智能生成的內容可能不準確或不一致。請閱讀鏈接文章,瞭解更多詳情和信息。OKX 不對第三方網站上的內容負責。包含穩定幣、NFTs 等在內的數字資產涉及較高程度的風險,其價值可能會產生較大波動。請根據自身財務狀況,仔細考慮交易或持有數字資產是否適合您。


