This onchain vote confirms a set of principles (the Principles) for the Uniswap DAO. The draft Principles were written by Atis (independent delegate) and Erik (Avantgarde Finance). We gratefully acknowledge the comments and suggestions from many other Uniswap DAO delegates and community members.
On executing the proposal, the Principles will be published onchain using the setText function of ENS Public Resolver contract for the uniswap.eth node.
Uniswap DAO Principles
The delegates agree to recognize the following principles and let them guide their decision-making in Uniswap DAO governance.
Processual Principles
Scope. The purpose of the Uniswap DAO is to govern the Uniswap protocol [1]. This includes protocol parameters adjustments and fund allocation to foster the growth of the Uniswap protocol [2].
Process. The Uniswap DAO follows the governance process [3] as outlined in the Uniswap Docs and on the Uniswap Governance Forum.
Onchain Focus. The operations of the DAO should focus on on-chain assets, and key decisions should be recorded onchain to preserve transparency at both operational and governance levels [4]. This includes maintaining on-chain voting as part of the governance process, as is currently done, and using on-chain transactions to transfer funds.
Conduct-Related Principles
Disclosure. Conflicts of interest should be disclosed clearly on the delegate description page and, whenever relevant, in forum discussions and in the voting rationale. Severe conflicts of interest that could undermine the integrity of governance must be avoided. If a proposal includes specific actions, such as requiring delegates with conflicts of interest to abstain, these directives must be followed. In cases of doubt, delegates should err on the side of transparency and openness [5].
Security. Given the systemic importance of the Uniswap protocol to DeFi and the size of the DAO treasury, delegates must carefully consider security when making decisions. They should follow established processes to securely and effectively deliver products to the ecosystem, and vote against proposals that expose the protocol or treasury to risks. In ambiguous cases, the proposer must demonstrate the proposal is safe. However, delegates are not accountable for failing to anticipate all indirect consequences of a proposal.
Legibility. To maintain the integrity of the governance process, rationales for votes should be published in a manner that is understandable to the broader community. Proposals and their reasoning should be clear to outsiders, even those unfamiliar with the history of DAO votes or without access to side-channel communication between delegates. Concrete data and empirical evidence should be included to back decision-making when available.
Good Faith. Delegates should act with honesty and integrity when participating in governance, and vote in accordance with what they believe is in the best interest of the Uniswap protocol.
Due Care. Delegates should conduct a professional review of each proposal prior to voting, and are advised to abstain from voting when unable to conduct the necessary diligence to understand a given proposal
Public Feedback. Delegates should inform the community if they consider that a proposal is superficial, light, unclear or unsubstantiated and needs to be improved or deepened before it is submitted to a vote.
Structural Principles
Decentralization. Decision-making in the DAO should remain decentralized in all forms, with the aim of keeping the DAO credibly neutral, censorship-resistant and resilient against capture by any single group of aligned actors, whether internal or external [6]. Delegates must prevent the formation of cartels and ensure that the protocol is protected from any proposals driven by personal motives that do not align with the protocol’s best interests.
Representation. Delegates primarily represent UNI token holders, however, delegates should make a reasonable effort to understand the arguments from all potentially affected stakeholders when making decisions and be respectful of differing viewpoints.
Accountability. Delegates are accountable to the Uniswap community and should show a willingness to communicate with affected stakeholders, remain open to scrutiny, and, where possible, communicate key rationales to maintain trust through transparent decision-making processes.
The terms “should” and “must” in the text are expected to be interpreted following the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) guidelines [7].
[6] J Austgen, A Fábrega, S Allen, K Babel, M Kelkar, A Juels. DAO Decentralization: Voting-Bloc Entropy, Bribery, and Dark DAOs. https://arxiv.org/abs/2311.03530
I agree with most of this in principal but I dont think an onchain vote is an appropriate way to express or endorse this, and I'm also a bit of a "bylaws minimalist" wrt DAOs in general- enumerating a bunch of potentially unenforceable rules feels like a distraction
Supporting this proposal makes sure the Uniswap DAO operates transparently and effectively, guided by clear principles like decentralization, accountability, and security. These principles foster integrity, safeguard governance, and align decision-making with the DAO’s mission to strengthen and grow the protocol.