Empowering Civic Engagement through Open Source Collaboration: A P2P Foundation Proposal

Empowering Civic Engagement through Open Source Collaboration: A P2P Foundation Proposal

Collaborate to produce open-source research enabling community organizers to leverage web3 and civic innovation. Focus areas include governance, knowledge management, and alternative economics. Utilize P2P Foundation’s documentation expertise.
Application
Applied on: 2 Aug 2024 10:29 AM
Approved
User Review
AI Review
A1
Reviewed on 2 Aug 2024 11:00 AM
At least one project lead must be a member of the OpenCivics Consortium
The project documentation does not specify whether any project leads are members of the OpenCivics Consortium.
Projects must conduct research that is Creative Commons as a public good
The P2P Foundation operates a publicly accessible wiki and produces open source research, indicating the work would be a public good under Creative Commons.
Research must fall into one of the focus areas listed in the round description
The project's focus areas, such as impact measurement, commons governance, collaborative knowledge management, and community currencies, align with the listed focus areas of the round.
Projects must agree to coordinate and collaborate during and after the round with other grantees to collate and present their research progress in a Grantee Impact Showcase prior to GG22
There is no explicit statement in the project documentation that confirms their agreement to coordinate and collaborate with other grantees for a Grantee Impact Showcase prior to GG22.
Grant applications must direct funds to a multi-signature wallet
The project documentation does not mention the use of a multi-signature wallet for directing funds.
Projects must indicate what collaborative mechanism they will utilize to govern, evaluate and compensate participant contributions (Coordinape, DeWork, Charmverse, Notion, DAO Haus, Google Docs & Sheets, etc)
The project indicates that it will use Google Docs & Sheets as the collaborative mechanism.
Projects must indicate reasonable and verifiable milestones for the following possible funding amounts received: $1,000; $3,000; $6,000
The project documentation does not specify milestones for the different possible funding amounts of $1,000, $3,000, and $6,000.