DAOs60 DAY WEB3 JOURNEY (Day 16)
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IntroductionYesterday, you learned that Ethereum prioritizes decentralization while Solana prioritizes speed.
Today, you’ll see decentralization in action through DAOs (Decentralized Autonomous Organizations).
A DAO is an organization with no CEO. No board of directors. No central authority. Instead, it’s governed by code and community voting. Sounds utopian, right? “Everyone votes, everyone decides!”
But here’s the reality: DAOs are messy, imperfect, and often fail. Yet they’re still one of the most important experiments in Web3.
Today, you’ll understand what DAOs actually are, how they work, and why they matter.
What Is a DAO?Simple Definition
A DAO is an organization run by smart contracts instead of people.
Traditional Company:
Board of Directors → CEO → Decisions → Implementation
DAO:
Key CharacteristicsImagine a company where:
That’s the DAO promise.
How DAOs Work: The MechanicsStep 1: Governance TokensEvery DAO has a governance token (like UNI for Uniswap, MKR for MakerDAO).
What they do:
Example:
You buy 100 UNI tokens.
Uniswap DAO has a vote on fee structure.
You can vote with your 100 UNI.
Anyone with enough tokens can create a proposal:
“I propose that Uniswap reduces trading fees from 0.3% to 0.25%”
Other community members can:
The community votes for a set time (usually 3–7 days):
Voting options:
✓ YES (approve the proposal)
✗ NO (reject the proposal)
~ ABSTAIN (no opinion)
Result: If YES votes > NO votes, proposal passes
Step 4: ExecutionIf a proposal passes, a smart contract automatically executes it:
Smart contract receives voting result
↓
IF votes_yes > votes_no:
Execute the proposed change
ELSE:
Reject and log the result
All verifiable on-chain
Real Example: Uniswap DAOProposal UNI-7 (Oct 2021): Reduce Uniswap fee tier from 1% to 0.5% for certain token pairs
Process:
Outcome: Uniswap became more competitive for low-risk trading pairs.
Real-World DAOs: How They Actually GovernUniswap DAOWhat it governs:
Token: UNI
Treasury: $5B+ in assets
Voting threshold: 65 million UNI votes needed to pass proposals
How it works:
Real decision: In 2023, Uniswap voted to deploy on Arbitrum (Layer 2), which reduced fees for users by 100x.
MakerDAOWhat it governs:
Token: MKR
Treasury: $2B+ in ETH collateral
Type of DAO: More technical than Uniswap
How it works:
Real decision: MakerDAO approved PSM (Peg Stability Module) to better defend DAI’s $1 peg during market volatility.
Aave DAOWhat it governs:
Token: AAVE
Treasury: $10B+ in TVL
Type: Community votes on risk management
How it works:
Real decision: Aave voted to add Ethereum to collateral options, increasing borrowing capacity.
DAO Governance Models: Different ApproachesModel 1: Simple Majority (1 Token = 1 Vote)How it works:
Example: Uniswap uses this
Pros:
Cons:
How it works:
Why? Prevents wealthy people from dominating while still rewarding participation.
Example: Some experimental DAOs
Pros:
Cons:
How it works:
Example: Some portions of Compound DAO
Pros:
Cons:
✅ True ownership — Token holders actually own a piece
✅ Transparency — All decisions on-chain, auditable forever
✅ No single point of failure — Can’t fire the CEO or shut it down
✅ Global participation — Anyone can vote from anywhere
✅ Alignment of incentives — Stakeholders make decisions
✅ Permissionless — No approval needed from anyone
❌ Whale domination — Rich people hold most voting power
❌ Voter apathy — 95% of token holders don’t vote
❌ Slow decision-making — Voting takes days; competitors move faster
❌ Irreversible mistakes — If community votes wrong, it’s on-chain forever
❌ Governance attacks — Attackers can flash-loan tokens, vote, then sell
❌ Legal uncertainty — Are DAOs legally liable? Who’s responsible if something breaks?
❌ Treasury management — Holding billions in a smart contract is risky
What happened: One investor holds 30% of DAO tokens, can dominate votes
Example: Early versions of some DAOs were controlled by early investors
Impact: Decisions favored wealthy members, not the community
Solution: Some DAOs now use quadratic voting or cap voting power
What happened: Only 1–2% of token holders actually vote
Example: Uniswap proposals get 18M eligible voters, but only 500K actually participate
Impact: Decisions made by tiny active minority, not true community
Solution: Better incentives for voting, simpler proposals, educational efforts
What happened: Attacker borrows massive tokens, votes on proposal, then sells tokens
Example: Flash loan attack on bZx DAO
Impact: Democracy manipulated by temporary token holder
Solution: Block voting power at specific block heights to prevent flash attacks
What happened: Community votes for something that damages the protocol
Example: Some DAOs voted for risky feature deployments that broke
Impact: Community has to vote to fix mistake, wasting time and resources
Solution: Some DAOs now have “veto” power for emergency situations
CONTROL
Traditional Company: CEO + Board make decisions
DAO: Token holders vote on decisions
TRANSPARENCY
Traditional Company: Private board meetings and decisions
DAO: All votes and decisions are public on-chain
OWNERSHIP
Traditional Company: Shareholders own pieces
DAO: Token holders own pieces
DECISION SPEED
Traditional Company: Fast (executives make calls immediately)
DAO: Slow (voting takes 3–7 days minimum)
LEGAL STATUS
Traditional Company: Established law and regulation
DAO: Unclear and evolving (varies by country)
BARRIER TO ENTRY
Traditional Company: Hard (buy shares on secondary market, expensive)
DAO: Easy (buy tokens on exchange, smaller amounts)
PROFIT DISTRIBUTION
Traditional Company: Go to shareholders via dividends
DAO: Go to token holders (varies by DAO structure)
ACCOUNTABILITY
Traditional Company: Board reports to shareholders (privately)
DAO: Everything is on-chain and publicly verifiable forever
DAOs are not:
DAOs are:
The honest truth: Some DAOs work beautifully. Others are captured by whales, vote on nonsense, or get hacked.
Just like traditional organizations, DAOs are only as good as the people participating in them.
Key TakeawaysOfficial DAO Documentation:
Uniswap Governance: https://uniswap.org/governance — Voting portal and proposals
MakerDAO Governance: https://makerdao.com/governance — How MakerDAO votes
Aave Governance: https://aave.com/governance — Aave DAO portal
DAO Tools & Platforms:
Snapshot: https://snapshot.org/ — Off-chain voting platform for DAOs
Aragon: https://aragon.org/ — DAO creation and management tools
Educational:
“DAOs, WAOs, and the future of work” — A framework for understanding governance structures
Community:
Web3 for Humans Telegram: https://t.me/Web3ForHumans — Join daily discussions
Series Navigation60-Day Web3 Journey:
DAOs Explained: How Decentralized Organizations Actually Work was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.