Conversation

2) There are pros and cons to each model. There's a spectrum. Generally, the closer to full token voting you get, the more decentralized and "pure" it is. The closer you get to dictatorship, the easier it is.
1
9
3) Also, though, left is only one kind of risk--another is e.g. YAM-tastrophies. and those are also more likely the closer you get to full token voting, because it's harder to patch bugs.
2
7
Replying to
5) In the end, I think I mostly agree with (and I think (?) though not sure) on this -- I lean towards: a) flexible at the very beginning to build b) transition to "anyone can build what they want but already built things are immutable"
1
10
6) the nice thing about (b) is that it means no one can make changes to steal funds, but also if there's an upgrade you can push it (to a new copy) and let people migrate (though if you do this too much it's a pain). And then, eventually, "specialized governance":
1
4
7) token-based governance over things like fees etc. which can't retroactively steal funds, and immutability over the fundamental behavior of the protocol (modulo starting a new version with new properties).
1
7