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Just caught something interesting about how Michael Egorov is thinking about DAO governance. Curve's founder basically said that conflict and disagreement within DAOs aren't actually problems—they're signs the community is engaged and thinking critically about decisions.
What got me was the December vote example. Curve had a proposal for a $6.2 million CRV token grant to Swiss Stake AG, but the community pushed back hard on it initially. Instead of just ramming it through, they listened to the feedback, revised the proposal, and put it back to a vote. This time, 82% of eligible voters participated. That's insane for a DAO vote—most governance participation sits under 20%.
Michael Egorov's point here is pretty solid: that kind of engagement only happened because people actually debated and disagreed on the first round. The controversy didn't kill the proposal; it energized the community. More people showed up because they felt heard and wanted their voice to matter on the revised version.
I think what's happening with Curve is actually a blueprint for how DAOs mature. Michael Egorov is essentially saying that healthy governance isn't about consensus for consensus's sake—it's about creating space for real discussion. When token holders feel like their criticism actually shapes outcomes, they participate. When decisions get made in a vacuum by whale holders, turnout tanks.
The broader lesson here matters for DeFi. Most DAOs are struggling with voter apathy because governance feels performative. But Curve's showing that if you actually incorporate feedback and revise proposals based on community input, people will show up. Michael Egorov's basically arguing that debate and pushback make decisions stronger, not weaker, because they force protocols to address concerns upfront.
Not sure if other DAOs will follow this model, but it's worth watching. The fact that 82% participation happened after controversy—not despite it—says something about what real community engagement looks like.