EDIT: I made a significant rewrite to this proposal, adding a framework for deciding on ZF Grants funding, removing the shielded adoption metric, but keeping this version here and making the rewrite available below and updated the GitHub PR appropriately.
Before diving in, I want to make it abundantly clear that this is my personal proposal and in no way, shape, or form an official Zcash Foundation ZIP suggestion.
TL;DR: I try to put the best pieces of various proposals together. It sidesteps code complexity in implementation, funds the ECC/ZF, ECC stays a for-profit with restrictions, funds external parties through ZF Grants, ties some of the payouts to shielded adoption, all while carving out a limited-scoped opportunity for extending governance to more groups than the ECC/ZF.
During these past months, Iâve done my best to maintain neutrality during this discussion, and I hope readers view this post as I earnestly intend: A bridge between proposals, a compromise greater than the sum of its individual parts. One that keeps the ECC, the Foundation, and the community aligned on Zcash â not just Zcash today, but the ideal future of Zcash.
Despite the risk of wielding my âinfluenceâ or âpowerâ to unduly change the course of the communityâs discourse, I consider it a greater risk to stay silent. I hope this proposal is met in that spirit, and offers a viable path for the ECC, Zcash Foundation, and Zcash users at large.
Assumptions
Everyone makes assumptions when crafting a proposal. My assumptions are based on what Iâve teased out from the discussion on the community forums, Twitter, and private conversations, undoubtedly sprinkled with my own personal bias. I suspect they could form the basis of broad community consensus, but I wonât know until theyâve been posted, discussed, polled, and ultimately included (or not included) in software being developed by the Zcash Foundation and ECC and run by individuals in the community.
The fundamental assumption is that Zcash wonât thrive without a dev fund. I wish this wasnât true (I really do), and for the longest time I was against the idea. But Iâve come to fear the alternative without one; I fear the privacy technology pioneered by Zcash may never reach its true potential â not just for our community, but for others interested in novel approaches to private money.
With that fundamental assumption out of the way, here are the others:
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The ECC and Zcash Foundation shouldnât get a blank check; accountability is a prerequisite for any disbursement, based on the Foundationâs statement and other proposals being suggested.
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Itâs possible for the ECC to remain a for-profit, but with (legally enforced) restrictions that ensure accountability and add teeth to their claim that no early investors are enriched by a new dev fund / no new investors are beneficiaries.
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Based on the ideas brought forward by Eran Tromer, a portion of the funds directed to the ECC / Zcash Foundation should be based on shielded adoption, which is the most pressing issue facing Zcash today and unlike many other metrics is both easily measurable and less likely to be gamed. (compared to a miner-signaling proposal for example)
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A nontrivial portion of the funds should be directed to users/orgs outside of the ECC/Zcash Foundation, and the ECC/Zcash Foundation should be in the minority in deciding how these funds are disbursed (e.g. through some process with broader input beyond ECC/Zcash Foundation employees, like a more constrained version of Placeholder or Blocktowerâs âthird partyâ proposal).
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The actual code changes for NU4 should be minimal and the âgovernance complexityâ should be offloaded to legal agreements, not engineering hours. The dev fund would be deposited into a single address for the fund (ideally shielded with a viewing key) controlled through a trust (originally Andrew Millerâs idea), disbursed quarterly based on the accountability requirements and shielded adoption metrics described below. Trustees will be mutually agreed upon by the ECC and Zcash Foundation.
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The gross amount of the dev fund should still be 20% of the block reward, and it should end in 4 years. (Unless we go through another process like this one to extend it, though I personally hope we donât)
A word on the enigmatic âthird partyâ floating around
With all due respect to the proposers behind some variant of a â2-of-3 multisigâ decision-making process for all disbursement decisions: I think this is a bad idea. To quote a previous forum post of mine:
âŚ2-of-3 multisig [is] better if we find the right third party. That in and of itself requires an additional process/mutual agreement between the three parties (which is much more difficult than a bilateral agreement), and as Iâve mentioned before in presentations in the past, 2-of-2 with known entities dedicated to Zcash is better than jumping straight to 2-of-3 with a third party hastily decided or staying with 1-of-1 entity trademarks and software development processes.
As for why 2-of-2 is still strictly better than 1-of-1: in the case of cryptocurrency governance, I believe that inaction in the case of disagreement is a better outcome than one party unilaterally exercising power.
More to the point, I worry that the âthird partyâ in question is being idolized into some Platonic ideal, and in reality either the ECC or the Zcash Foundation would spend a great deal of their time currying favor in either the process or selection of the party in question in the limited time between now and that partyâs selection. Given that the Zcash Foundation is charged with representing community interests, Iâm not sure why another community-focused representative would really make sense from the ECCâs perspective â theyâd be constantly outvoted if interests clashed, so from a balance of power perspective Iâm not sure why the ECC finds would find that tenable. And Iâm not sure the community would want the âthird partyâ to be another profit-generating enterprise, like a VC or another startup, which would tip power another way.
The crux of this proposal still centers around the idea that the Zcash Foundation and ECC share responsibility for protocol development, and assumes an eventual 2-of-2 agreement on the trademark and that both continue developing consensus-compatible node software that interacts with the Zcash network. But it mandates accountability for disbursement of funds to the ECC/Zcash Foundation, and expands outside stakeholder input on funds that wouldnât be earmarked for the ECC/Zcash Foundation (similar to Placeholderâs earlier version of their proposal), while it doesnât preclude the possibility of migrating to broader â2-of-3â later on.
Why a trust?
The main reason: reducing complexity creep in consensus code so the ECC and Zcash Foundation can budget for other features in NU4. Rather than try to incorporate some complex mechanism for dev fund disbursements on-chain, we can meet the NU4 deadline with the simplest possible code-change and spend more time ironing out the details of the trust âoff-chain.â Since both the ECC and the Zcash Foundation are based in the US, using a trust with well-specified criteria for disbursements is a reasonable path. This also fits in nicely with lex-nodeâs proposal for legal covenants on funding.
The details
Upon NU4 activation, 20% of the mining reward (post-Blossom/post-halvening = 0.625 ZEC per block) would go to a single shielded address with a view key widely distributed and known to the community and controlled by a trust established by the ECC and Zcash Foundation. Every 105,000 blocks (a quarter of the year) until 1,680,000 blocks after activation (the next halvening), the trust would disburse funds the following way, requiring a public report with every disbursement:
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4% to the ECC, assuming they meet the accountability requirements set by the trust/described below
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4% to the Zcash Foundation, assuming they meet the accountability requirements set by the trust/described below
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Up to an additional 4% to the ECC proportionally based on average amount of shielded value (scaled to 80% shielded as âfully shieldedâ) over total supply over the last 105,000 blocks, with the remainder held in escrow until Zcash is âfully shieldedâ for at least a month
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Up to an additional 4% to the Zcash Foundation proportionally based on average amount of shielded value (scaled to 80% shielded as âfully shieldedâ) over total supply for the last 105,000 blocks, with the remainder held in escrow until Zcash is âfully shieldedâ for at least a month
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4% to the Zcash Foundation as a RESTRICTED donation (Nonprofit Restricted Funds) purely for disbursement through ZF Grants, with additional restrictions and stipulations described below
Might be easier to see how this shakes out with actual numbers: 0.625ZEC * 105000 = 65625 ZEC accrued in the trust every quarter. For the first quarter/simplicityâs sake, letâs assume that 20% of the total value was shielded on average and that both the ECC and Zcash Foundation met the accountability requirements set by the trust. Then disbursements would look like this:
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13125 ZEC to the ECC for meeting accountability requirements
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13125 ZEC to the Zcash Foundation for meeting accountability requirements
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13125 * minimum(0.2,0.8)/0.8 (80% considered âfully shieldedâ) shielded adoption = 3281.25 additional ZEC to the ECC for shielded adoption. 9843.75 ZEC would be held in escrow by the trust until Zcash is âfully shieldedâ whereupon the balance will be disbursed to the ECC.
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13125 * minimum(0.2,0.8)/0.8 (80% considered âfully shieldedâ) shielded adoption = 3281.25 additional ZEC to the Zcash Foundation for shielded adoption. 9843.75 ZEC would be held in escrow by the trust until Zcash is âfully shieldedâ whereupon the balance will be disbursed to the Zcash Foundation.
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13125 ZEC to ZF Grants to be disbursed to external individuals and organizations (via the Zcash Foundation as a restricted donation)
The trustâs accountability requirements
Here Iâm borrowing from the Foundationâs guidance but adding some stipulations to cement the Foundationâs independence, prevent the Foundation from hoarding its endowment, and handle the ECC as a for-profit. Before disbursing funds each quarter, the trust would need to validate that both the ECC and Zcash Foundation:
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Published a quarterly tech roadmap reports and financial reports, detailing spending levels/burn rate and cash/ZEC on hand
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(if beginning of calendar year) Published a yearly review of organization performance, along the lines of our âState of the Zcash Foundationâ report
For the Zcash Foundation, the trust would further require:
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No board member may have an interest in the ECC (current board members with an interest would need to divest of their ECC holdings prior to the beginning of this dev fund)
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Excluding money restricted for ZF Grants, the Foundationâs total assets must stay below $100mm (if its assets ever exceeded this amount from a disbursement, the trust could direct the funds toward an additional restricted ZF Grants donation) [Edit: added this to prevent the Foundation from excessively hoarding its endowment and ensure funds are circulated to other partiesâŚI seriously cannot imagine a world where the Foundation would need more than that]
Additionally, for the ECC, the trust would need to validate the following before each disbursement:
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(if the beginning of fiscal year) Published yearly audited financial statements at the same level of detail as a public company (to mirror the Foundationâs Form 990 requirement as 501(c)(3))
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No outside investment was received while they are obligatory recipients of this dev fund
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No portion of the dev fund went to dividends, profit-sharing, or share/equity buybacks while they are obligatory recipients of this dev fund
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No portion of the dev fund went into speculative investments in other companies while they are obligatory recipients of this dev fund
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No dilution of ECCâs equity except in the case of options/RSUs for new/existing employees while they are obligatory recipients of this dev fund
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Thereâs no change-of-control (majority control changes) at the ECC while they are obligatory recipients of this dev fund
The ECC must share necessary information with the trust to ascertain no violations of the above, but the information itself (i.e. cap table and detailed financials) should remain private between the ECC and the trustees unless there is a violation that is not cured.
The shielded adoption metric
I applaud @tromerâs suggestion for tying some portion of the dev fund to shielded adoption. Itâs a great tool for adding a protocol-verified accountability metric and I hope itâs considered in many of the other proposals as well. My particular adaptation of it provides for some floor of funding for both the ECC and Zcash Foundation, while providing a variable payout based on shielded uptake (scaled to 80% as âfully shieldedâ to incorporate the possibility of lost value in transparent balances and protect against a single entity holding veto power against shielded uptake). Rather than reward the remaining ZEC to miners â which could cause perverse behavior where miners might censor shielded transactions â the trust would hold the remaining ZEC in escrow, to be paid out to both organizations in lump sum upon reaching a âfully shieldedâ world during the next quarterly disbursement.
I define the âfully shieldedâ condition as follows: we have 35,000 sequential blocks where the shielded value pool is 80%+ shielded for that same time period. The bonus can be held until after the dev fund expires, though I certainly hope weâll reach that condition before then.
What happens in the case of a violation
The violating party has 30 days to attempt to cure the violation (if itâs possible). If they cannot, future funds are forfeit and will be provably burned by the trust (this inspired by @amillerâs miner burn proposal). [Edit: removed burn per @mistfpgaâs suggestion] If they cannot, future funds are redirected to ZF Grants via a restricted donation to the Zcash Foundation.
The ZF Grants portion
I was disappointed to see the Placeholder proposal migrate away from a separate fund with their suggested 2-of-3 structure â I think itâs an appropriate step to broadening stakeholder input and spreading more funding beyond the Foundation and ECC without risking our more conservative governance structure. And we already have a model in place to distribute those funds: the ZF Grants platform.
Another advantage (or disadvantage, depending on your perspective) of a 501(c)(3) is that donations can have restrictions placed on them by donors. I suggest that a portion of the dev fund goes to the Foundation but with the express (and restricted) purpose of being distributed via ZF Grants. The Foundation would continue to administer ZF Grants and distribute funds, but it wouldnât be in charge of deciding where those funds go; instead, the trust can demand that the ZF Grants process expand its decision-making process and include broader input. In the discussions around the various âthird partyâ proposals, some have suggested a 3-of-5 approach where the ECC and Zcash Foundation are in the minority; I think that structure would work well for these funds. Itâs not the full dev fund so we are limiting the downside risk of selecting the âwrongâ third parties, which also means we can give those third parties more voice (by making them outnumber the ECC/Zcash Foundation).
In terms of selecting those third parties, I donât have a silver bulletâŚwhich is very much the issue with âthird partyâ selection in general. However, I think the Foundationâs Board election last year was a pretty good model. One possibility is to have a more open community advisory panel next year and follow the same steps for those three seats, and rotate them yearly â perhaps eventually changing the vote to originate from the shielded pool instead of an advisory panel. Those grant reviewers would be charged with judging new grants and selecting RFPs on a weekly basis, and the Foundation would be charged with administering their decisions. The Foundation could also chose to fund ZF Grants beyond the restricted donations from the trust, but doing so would be at their discretion.
An attempt at compromise
I donât know if this is at all appealing to anyone else but me, but Iâd be remiss if I didnât suggest it. There are scores of great ideas on the forums, and I took the (subjective, mind you) best parts of each into a proposal that hopefully meets the standards of the ECC, the Zcash Foundation, and the broader community. I sincerely hope you agree, but if not, I hope it opens other avenues for discussion that may bridge the gap.
If there is any interest in this proposal, I will convert it into a formal ZIP and open a PR by August 31st. Thanks to everyone for their consideration.