Token Engineering Commons
Token engineering ensures safe, resilient blockchain systems through engineering discipline. It fosters public trust in crypto-economic systems, with significant contributions to grants and funding mechanisms for Web3 technologies.User Review
AI Review
A1
Reviewed on 8 Aug 2024 02:02 AM
At least one project lead must be a member of the OpenCivics Consortium
The application does not indicate that any project lead is a member of the OpenCivics Consortium.
Projects must conduct research that is Creative Commons as a public good
The project description indicates research into public goods like Tunable Quadratic Funding and sharing the findings, suggesting it is Creative Commons.
Research must fall into one of the focus areas listed in the round description
The project is focused on token engineering and funding mechanisms, but it is not clear if these topics fall under the specific focus areas listed in the round description.
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
The application does not explicitly state an agreement to coordinate and collaborate with other grantees.
Grant applications must direct funds to a multi-signature wallet
The application does not provide details on the wallet type to be used for grant applications.
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 application states that Notion will be used 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 application does not provide specific milestones for the different funding amounts.