SecretDAO votes to restructure foundation after public spat between organizations
The new foundation will be governed by a board of 3 or more members, and no organization will hold more than one seat.
The DAO that governs privacy-focused blockchain Secret Network (SCRT) has voted to restructure its Secret Foundation as a non-profit with a “transparent operation,” according to the proposal’s official page.
Congrats to the #SecretNetwork community! The Secret Foundation has been restructured as an NPO, with a community-elected board & amendments requested by the founder. #blockchain #cryptocurrency
— Krypton AI (@KryptonAi) February 10, 2023
The proposal stated that the new foundation “will be registered as an NPO [non-profit organization] and provide an annual account of its activities, including key performance indicators (KPIs), budgets, and goals.” The foundation will be run by a board made up of three or more community members. No single organization will be allowed to hold more than two seats on the board, according to the proposal.
It passed with 90.13% of the vote. 9.87% of the DAO abstained from the vote, and no members voted against the proposal.
The approval has come after a public feud had broken out between SecretLabs and Secret Foundation, which are two separate organizations that support Secret Network. On January 14, SecretLabs CEO Guy Zyskind accused Foundation CEO Tor Bair of cashing out SCRT tokens as a dividend paid out to himself and of not disclosing this transaction.
In a forum response, Bair denied the allegation, claiming that the dividends were part of his regular salary and were disclosed as required. Even so, Bair agreed that the Foundation needed to be more transparent, stating:
“I have communicated privately and publicly on multiple occasions about my desire to be a part of that change, which could include restructuring the Foundation entity, more closely supporting Secret Agency, establishing a global board, or other next steps. We firmly support this path and wish to work in close coordination with other network actors.”
Despite this public support from Bair for a restructuring plan, one major validator of the Secret Network announced on Jan. 30 that it was shutting down due to “recent events” and other issues.
The restructuring proposal was created on Feb.2. Voting began on it immediately and continued for seven days. According to the proposal’s text, the DAO intends to have the new Secret Foundation up and running within 90 days after passage.