Trusted Seed Mentorship Program

Trusted Seed Mentorship Program

A global network enhancing regenerative economies via token engineering and DAO governance, focusing on mentorship, diverse community-building, innovative initiatives, and climate action through various programs and collaborative events.
Application
Applied on: 2 Aug 2024 01:34 PM
Round: Asia Round
Approved
User Review
AI Review
A1
Reviewed on 2 Aug 2024 02:01 PM
The Grant must be in support of or directly advance the Asian public goods ecosystem; or at least one founder identifies him/herself as Asian. We will refer to the [public goods report](https://www.gccofficial.org/explore.html#report) released by GCC last December for the definition of public goods.
The project includes a founder from the Philippines and aims to integrate participants from Asia, enhancing local initiatives with global blockchain innovations to address region-specific environmental and social challenges.
The project must clearly articulate the problem it addresses, the solution, the implementation plan, the financial plan, and demonstrate there is an excellent team or community for execution
The project comprehensively outlines the problem of enhancing token engineering for public goods, the mentorship-based solution, and detailed plans for execution. The team includes diverse and experienced members with a clear strategy for using the funding.
Project must be 3 months old and the project must demonstrate some tangible progress towards their stated goals, with a working MVP is available to the public. We will use Twitter, official website, github, and other public info to determine this. Newer projects should establish themselves and submit to the next round.
The project has been operational and showcases significant progress through initiatives like the Token Engineering Commons and other activities highlighted on their website and Twitter.
Grantees can be eliminated from consideration in the round if they are found to be encouraging or enabling Sybil attacks or other forms of malicious manipulation of the grants platform or the Gitcoin community.
There is no public information indicating any involvement in Sybil attacks or malicious activities. However, without thorough investigation, it remains uncertain.
Projects must comply with Gitcoin core rules and [eligibility criteria](https://gov.gitcoin.co/t/gg21-community-round-eligibility-criteria/19003).
Without an explicit review of all Gitcoin core rules and eligibility criteria in this context, it's not possible to determine full compliance definitively.