--- type: source title: "a16z Crypto: Community-Owned Characters and Decentralized Media — The Theoretical Framework" author: "a16z crypto" url: https://a16zcrypto.com/posts/article/community-owned-characters-decentralized-media-blockchains-fantasy-hollywood/ date: 2024-01-01 domain: entertainment secondary_domains: [internet-finance] format: article status: unprocessed priority: medium tags: [community-owned-ip, a16z, governance, creative-governance, web3-ip, theory, cryptopunks, decentralized-media] --- ## Content a16z crypto's most developed intellectual framework on community-owned IP and decentralized character development. **Core thesis:** - Community-owned characters create a fundamentally different incentive structure from traditional IP - CryptoPunks holders independently created PUNKS Comic because their economic interests aligned with expanding the IP - Token-holder voting on high-level creative direction, with independent production companies executing via RFPs - Founder/artist as community leader, not sole creator **Critical caveat (the most important quote):** **"Crowdsourcing is the worst way to create quality character IP."** The argument: aligned economic incentives ≠ creative governance by committee. The theoretical model is: - Community votes on *what* to fund (strategic direction) - Professional execution on *how* (creative development) - Founder/artist maintains community leadership role **The royalty mechanism:** - NFT holders earn ongoing royalties from IP licensing of their specific character - Creates permanent financial skin-in-the-game that traditional fandom lacks - Aligns holder interests with IP quality and expansion **Historical precedent cited:** - CryptoPunks holders independently funded PUNKS Comic (no governance vote required — economic alignment was sufficient) ## Agent Notes **Why this matters:** This is the most intellectually rigorous statement of the community-owned IP thesis, and it contains a self-limiting clause that almost no one discusses: "Crowdsourcing is the worst way to create quality character IP." The a16z framework actually agrees that community should NOT make creative decisions — they should make strategic/funding decisions. Professional execution remains concentrated. This means even in the idealized community-owned IP model, the concentrated actor model for creative execution is preserved. **What surprised me:** How closely the a16z theoretical model aligns with what Pudgy Penguins and Claynosaurz are actually doing — not because they followed the framework, but because the operational reality produced the same structure independently. This convergence suggests the concentrated-actor-for-creative-execution pattern is emergent, not just ideological. **What I expected but didn't find:** Examples of the "community votes on what, professionals execute how" model actually being deployed. CryptoPunks comic is cited but appears to be a spontaneous holder action, not a formal governance mechanism. The framework remains mostly theoretical in deployment. **KB connections:** - Central to community-owned IP claims - The "crowdsourcing is worst" quote directly relates to concentrated actor model - Royalty mechanism connects to community economics claims **Extraction hints:** - The a16z framework's self-limiting clause is the most valuable extraction: even the strongest proponents of community IP agree creative execution should remain concentrated - The gap between theoretical framework and practical deployment (framework exists since ~2024, not yet deployed at scale) is itself worth noting - CryptoPunks comic as holder-spontaneous action (not governance-mandated) is an important nuance **Context:** a16z crypto is the most influential VC in Web3. Their intellectual framework shapes how community-owned IP is discussed and structured across the industry. This piece is likely the theoretical foundation for Pudgy Penguins and similar projects. ## Curator Notes PRIMARY CONNECTION: Community-owned IP governance theory and the concentrated actor model WHY ARCHIVED: a16z's own framework contains the "crowdsourcing is worst" limitation that validates the concentrated actor model for creative execution — the leading intellectual framework in community IP agrees with the empirical finding EXTRACTION HINT: The "crowdsourcing is worst" quote should be the anchor for the claim that even community IP theory preserves concentrated creative execution; pair with Pudgy Penguins and Claynosaurz empirical evidence