Lately, as I’ve been reading through a few DAO proposals, the more I look at them, the more it feels less like “everyone decides together” and more like you’re watching how incentives get split—who gets to press the button. The wording in proposals like “subsidize participants” and “voting means you can claim an airdrop” is, plainly speaking, just renting out voting power temporarily. It can be pretty lively in the short term, but in the long run it often turns into a situation where the people who write proposals + the ones with leverage decide.



When I read proposals now, I first look for three things: where the money comes from (treasury or issuing more tokens), who ultimately has execution authority (has the multi-sig list changed), and whether the incentives only reward voting actions regardless of the content. Especially when I see parameters being “decentralized/decentralized back” from community voting—don’t be fooled by the packaged phrasing. If the power structure changes, then it changes.

One more thing: this whole wave of modularization and the DA layer has developers genuinely excited—which is also normal for users to be confused. But in DAOs, you have to be even more careful with proposals like this. The more flashy the technical narrative is, the easier it is to mask hard issues like “who controls data availability” and “who controls the upgrade switches.” Anyway, I’ll wait until the patch schedule and the permission diagram are clear before voting. No rush.
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