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A community for the latest discussions about the cutting edge of crypto design, it's culture and significant crypto news. Decentralize everything. Check out our [Community Guidelines](https://relevant.community/crypto/post/6122269e61d1cd005a877277/62427d3ed587ad005b647828)
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© 2020 Relevant Protocols Inc.
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"The idea is simple: DAOs need things done but are having a really hard time getting people to do those things. Thus, in a similar manner to liquidity mining, DAOs should ‘mine’ human capital to kickstart an active governance community."
"The idea is simple: DAOs need things done but are having a really hard time getting people to do those things. Thus, in a similar manner to liquidity mining, DAOs should ‘mine’ human capital to kickstart an active governance community."
This article depicts the problem of DAOs which lack human capital (labor) and offers to give incentives to boost it just like it is done in liquidity farming. The idea is great and essential but there is no real solution offered to the problem. And the reason is that this problem is the century-old problem that all associations, non-profits or activist groups face. This is an interesting point where digital communities are starting to realize that community building still has similar needs as in real life and building digital communities doesn’t mean that this is an entirely new way of building social interactions. My point is: tech is a tool, a mean, not an end goal which means that to build digital communities we need people who have experience building real ones (activists, social scientists, etc) alongside tech experts.
This article depicts the problem of DAOs which lack human capital (labor) and offers to give incentives to boost it just like it is done in liquidity farming. The idea is great and essential but there is no real solution offered to the problem. And the reason is that this problem is the century-old problem that all associations, non-profits or activist groups face. This is an interesting point where digital communities are starting to realize that community building still has similar needs as in real life and building digital communities doesn’t mean that this is an entirely new way of building social interactions. My point is: tech is a tool, a mean, not an end goal which means that to build digital communities we need people who have experience building real ones (activists, social scientists, etc) alongside tech experts.
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