64 lines
No EOL
7 KiB
Markdown
64 lines
No EOL
7 KiB
Markdown
---
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description: Real-world futarchy markets on MetaDAO demonstrate manipulation resistance but suffer from low participation when decisions are uncontroversial, dominated by a small group of sophisticated traders
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type: claim
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domain: internet-finance
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created: 2026-02-16
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confidence: proven
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source: "Governance - Meritocratic Voting + Futarchy"
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---
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# MetaDAOs futarchy implementation shows limited trading volume in uncontested decisions
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MetaDAO provides the most significant real-world test of futarchy governance to date. Their conditional prediction markets have proven remarkably resistant to manipulation attempts, validating the theoretical claim that [[futarchy is manipulation-resistant because attack attempts create profitable opportunities for defenders]]. However, the implementation also reveals important limitations that theory alone does not predict.
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In uncontested decisions -- where the community broadly agrees on the right outcome -- trading volume drops to minimal levels. Without genuine disagreement, there are few natural counterparties. Trading these markets in any size becomes a negative expected value proposition because there is no one on the other side to trade against profitably. The system tends to be dominated by a small group of sophisticated traders who actively monitor for manipulation attempts, with broader participation remaining low.
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**March 2026 comparative data (@01Resolved forensics):** The Ranger liquidation decision market — a highly contested proposal — generated $119K volume from 33 unique traders with 92.41% pass alignment. Solomon's treasury subcommittee proposal (DP-00001) — an uncontested procedural decision — generated only $5.79K volume at ~50% pass. The volume differential (~20x) between contested and uncontested proposals confirms the pattern: futarchy markets are efficient information aggregators when there's genuine disagreement, but offer little incentive for participation when outcomes are obvious. This is a feature, not a bug — capital is allocated to decisions where information matters, not wasted on consensus.
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This evidence has direct implications for governance design. It suggests that [[optimal governance requires mixing mechanisms because different decisions have different manipulation risk profiles]] -- futarchy excels precisely where disagreement and manipulation risk are high, but it wastes its protective power on consensual decisions. The MetaDAO experience validates the mixed-mechanism thesis: use simpler mechanisms for uncontested decisions and reserve futarchy's complexity for decisions where its manipulation resistance actually matters. The participation challenge also highlights a design tension: the mechanism that is most resistant to manipulation is also the one that demands the most sophistication from participants.
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### Additional Evidence (challenge)
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*Source: [[2025-06-12-optimism-futarchy-v1-preliminary-findings]] | Added: 2026-03-11 | Extractor: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5*
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Optimism's futarchy experiment achieved 5,898 total trades from 430 active forecasters (average 13.6 transactions per person) over 21 days, with 88.6% being first-time Optimism governance participants. This suggests futarchy CAN attract substantial engagement when implemented at scale with proper incentives, contradicting the limited-volume pattern observed in MetaDAO. Key differences: Optimism used play money (lower barrier to entry), had institutional backing (Uniswap Foundation co-sponsor), and involved grant selection (clearer stakes) rather than protocol governance decisions. The participation breadth (10 countries, 4 continents, 36 new users/day) suggests the limited-volume finding may be specific to MetaDAO's implementation or use case rather than a structural futarchy limitation.
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### Additional Evidence (confirm)
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*Source: [[2026-02-26-futardio-launch-fitbyte]] | Added: 2026-03-11 | Extractor: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5*
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FitByte ICO attracted only $23 in total commitments against a $500,000 target before entering refund status. This represents an extreme case of limited participation in a futarchy-governed decision. The conditional markets had essentially zero liquidity, making price discovery impossible and demonstrating that futarchy mechanisms require minimum participation thresholds to function. When a proposal is clearly weak (no technical details, no partnerships, ambitious claims without evidence), the market doesn't trade—it simply doesn't participate, leading to immediate refund rather than price-based rejection.
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### Additional Evidence (extend)
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*Source: [[2024-06-22-futardio-proposal-thailanddao-event-promotion-to-boost-deans-list-dao-engageme]] | Added: 2026-03-15 | Extractor: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5*
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Dean's List ThailandDAO proposal (DgXa6gy7nAFFWe8VDkiReQYhqe1JSYQCJWUBV8Mm6aM) failed on 2024-06-25 despite projecting 16x FDV increase with only 3% TWAP threshold required. The proposal explicitly calculated that $73.95 per-participant value creation across 50 participants would meet the threshold, yet failed to attract sufficient trading volume. This extends the 'limited trading volume' pattern from uncontested decisions to contested-but-favorable proposals, suggesting the participation problem is broader than initial observations indicated.
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### Additional Evidence (confirm)
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*Source: [[2024-07-04-futardio-proposal-proposal-3]] | Added: 2026-03-15*
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Proposal #3 failed with no indication of trading activity or market participation in the on-chain data, consistent with the pattern of minimal engagement in proposals without controversy or competitive dynamics.
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### Additional Evidence (extend)
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*Source: [[2024-10-30-futardio-proposal-swap-150000-into-isc]] | Added: 2026-03-15*
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The ISC treasury swap proposal (Gp3ANMRTdGLPNeMGFUrzVFaodouwJSEXHbg5rFUi9roJ) was a contested decision that failed, showing futarchy markets can reject proposals with clear economic rationale when risk factors dominate. The proposal offered inflation hedge benefits but markets priced early-stage counterparty risk higher, demonstrating active price discovery in treasury decisions.
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### Additional Evidence (challenge)
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*Source: [[2025-12-00-pine-analytics-metadao-q4-2025-report]] | Added: 2026-03-16*
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Q4 2025 data shows governance proposal volume increased 17.5x from $205K to $3.6M as ecosystem expanded from 2 to 8 protocols, suggesting engagement scales with ecosystem size rather than being structurally limited. The original claim may have been measuring early-stage adoption rather than inherent mechanism limitations.
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---
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Relevant Notes:
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- [[futarchy is manipulation-resistant because attack attempts create profitable opportunities for defenders]] -- MetaDAO confirms the manipulation resistance claim empirically
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- [[optimal governance requires mixing mechanisms because different decisions have different manipulation risk profiles]] -- MetaDAO evidence supports reserving futarchy for contested, high-stakes decisions
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- [[trial and error is the only coordination strategy humanity has ever used]] -- MetaDAO is a live experiment in deliberate governance design, breaking the trial-and-error pattern
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Topics:
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- [[livingip overview]] |