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| type | source_type | title | author | url | date | domain | format | status | priority | intake_tier | rationale | proposed_by | tags | ||
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| source | telegram | Telegram: @m3taversal — futairdbot-what-do-you-think-of-these-posts-http | @m3taversal | https://x.com/jabranthelawyer/status/2038413063381246199?s=20 | 2026-03-30 | entertainment | conversation | unprocessed | high | directed | what do you think of these posts? and the underlying one from metaDAO? Imo this approach makes sense from metaDAO but I want you think deeply and analyze | @m3taversal |
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Conversation
@m3taversal: @FutAIrdBot what do you think of these posts? https://x.com/jabranthelawyer/status/2038413063381246199?s=20 and the underlying one from metaDAO? https://x.com/metaproph3t/status/2038369060598223268 Imo this approach makes sense from metaDAO but I want you think deeply and analyze
Rio (response): Interesting situation. Let me break this down.
Proph3t's post is solid crisis management. The P2P founder betting on Polymarket that his own ICO would hit $6M is a clear conflict of interest, and MetaDAO's response of saying "we would have stopped this if we'd known" and then actively intervening is the right call. The key tension is that MetaDAO operates a permissioned launchpad, which means they're already exercising curatorial judgment. Once you curate, you own some of the reputational risk of what your launches do.
The lawyer's thread (jabranthelawyer) is where it gets sharp. Two points that matter:
First, by intervening in the P2P raise, MetaDAO moved from "platform" to "active participant." That's a meaningful legal distinction. A neutral platform that just runs the mechanics has one liability profile. A platform that pauses raises, evaluates founder conduct, and decides whether to continue has a very different one. Every intervention creates precedent that future founders and investors will point to.
Second, by citing the founder's past experience as justification for continuing the raise, MetaDAO arguably created a due diligence obligation on itself. If you're vouching for founders based on their track record, you're implicitly representing that you've verified that track record. That's a liability surface that didn't exist before they said it.
My take: MetaDAO did the right thing operationally but may have made a legal misstep in how they framed it. The smart move would have been to lean harder on the mechanism ("the futarchy governance can liquidate the treasury if the project fails, that's the investor protection") rather than vouching for the founder personally. The whole point of the unruggable ICO design is that you don't need to trust the team because the liquidation mechanism is the enforcement. The moment you start saying "we believe in this founder," you've undermined your own structural argument and taken on personal liability.
The broader lesson for MetaDAO: permissioned launches are a brand protection strategy, but every act of permission is also an act of endorsement. The more they intervene, the more they look like a traditional gatekeeper with traditional gatekeeper liability. The path to scaling is making the mechanism the trust layer, not the curation team.
SOURCE: jabranthelawyer legal analysis of MetaDAO P2P intervention — tweet thread arguing MetaDAO created due diligence obligations and moved from platform to active participant by intervening in P2P raise. Content: "Few thoughts if I was MetaDAO's lawyer: 1. P2P did something objectively wrong. Whether illegal TBC but possible. 2. Regulators look at conduct and by exercising control, it creates bad precedent in two ways: A) They've moved from simply a 'fundraising platform' to one actively involved in raise. B) By stating that founders past experience is basis to continue raise, they've created a due diligence obligation on themselves. Best to check the indemnities founders provide to ensure th" https://x.com/jabranthelawyer/status/2038413063381246199 — attributed to @m3taversal
SOURCE: Proph3t statement on P2P Polymarket betting controversy — MetaDAO co-founder addresses P2P founder betting on own ICO outcome on Polymarket, states they would have pushed against it if known earlier, describes intervention approach. https://x.com/metaproph3t/status/2038369060598223268 — attributed to @m3taversal
CLAIM: MetaDAO's active intervention in permissioned launches creates implicit due diligence obligations that increase legal liability beyond what a neutral platform mechanism would carry, because each curatorial decision is an act of endorsement that regulators and investors can point to as evidence of gatekeeper responsibility
CONFIDENCE: 0.7
Article Content (fetched)
Few thoughts if I was MetaDAO's lawyer:
-
P2P did something objectively wrong. Whether illegal TBC but possible
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Regulators look at conduct and by exercising control, it creates bad precedent in two ways here:
A) They've moved from simply a "fundraising platform" to one actively involved in raise
B) By stating that founders past experience + is basis to continue raise, they've created a due diligence obligation on themselves
- Best to check the indemnities founders provide to ensure they're covered because all of this has just increased MetaDAO's risk profile unnecessarily imo
Agent Notes
Why archived: Tagged exchange in ownership community. Rationale from contributor: what do you think of these posts? and the underlying one from metaDAO? Imo this approach makes sense from metaDAO but I want you think deeply and analyze Intake tier: directed — fast-tracked, contributor provided reasoning Triage: Conversation may contain [CLAIM], [ENTITY], or [EVIDENCE] for extraction.