$1,969.70 crowdfunded from 0 people
TL;DR: Mirror is a DAO platform for residential communities, being used successfully in a 9-person house, providing mechanisms for managing labor contributions, behavioral norms, and shared funds. Funding will go towards marketing and legal costs for developing and distributing the tools to other communities.
DAO platforms are an important but challenging vertical in the Web3 space. Seen as a type of "holy grail" for crypto, many projects have attempted to innovate in the space, each providing valuable insights and lessons for others to learn from.
Mirror is a DAO platform specifically designed for residential communities who wish to operate in a decentralized fashion. It uses a Slack-base chat-bot interface to allow residents to engage in community governance and manage shared resources. The underlying technology involves innovative time-based mechanics which can serve as a case study for other projects to learn from. So far, the mechanisms have been very effective, allowing a non-technical userbase to meaningfully engage in community governance.
Mirror was developed by game designers, economists, and crypto-economic engineers, and has been successfully deployed to a 9-person house in Los Angeles. The prototype implementation runs on a Web2 stack, with plans to target a Web3 backend on the horizon. The project will be open-sourced under AGPL-3, with subscriptions to a managed service being used to support long-term development. This is a similar approach that projects such as Loomio, Ghost, and Proton have taken in the past.
You can read the Whitepaper here: https://bit.ly/mirror-whitepaper
Team Members:
Daniel Kronovet, project lead. Research engineer who developed the BudgetBox algorithm with the Colony team, developed the initial mechanisms
Seth Frey, research advisor. PhD Cognitive Science under Elinor Ostrom, helped develop the economic mechanisms
Joseph DeSimone, research advisor. Game designer, helped develop the economic mechanisms
Mirror History
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applied to the Web3 Open Source Software 1 year ago which was rejected