ENS Founder Seeks to 'Seize Power' from DAO

Foresight NewsPublished on 2026-07-02Last updated on 2026-07-02

Abstract

On June 29th, the ENS community entered the on-chain voting phase for a proposal to renew the ENS DAO Security Council's veto power for two more years. Shortly after voting began, ENS founder Nick Johnson used his substantial ENS holdings to cast over 3.55 million votes against the proposal, swinging the outcome despite initial strong support. The Security Council was established in July 2024 with a 4/8 multisig veto power to protect the DAO's treasury (valued over $350 million) from malicious proposals during a period of low voter participation. Its powers were limited to vetoing only harmful proposals, not normal ones. Nick Johnson's opposition stems from broader concerns about ENS DAO's governance. In late 2025, he and others expressed frustration that the DAO had become mired in political gamesmanship, with capable contributors leaving and leadership falling to less experienced or misaligned parties. This context set the stage for a major restructuring proposal by ENS COO Katherine Wu on June 19th, titled "Next Era of ENS DAO: Empowering the ENS Foundation." The controversial proposal aims to transfer daily operations, treasury management, and long-term strategy to a restructured ENS Foundation with a professional board, while the DAO would retain core protocol governance powers. Critics, including original ENS constitution author Brantly Millegan, argue this effectively transfers treasury control from token holders to ENS Labs (the core development team), undermining ...


Written by: Eric, Foresight News


On June 29, a proposal by the ENS community to extend the veto power of the ENS DAO Security Committee for two years entered the on-chain voting stage. Shortly after voting began, the over 800,000 votes in favor far exceeded the less than 300,000 votes against. However, ENS founder Nick Johnson used his substantial ENS holdings to significantly increase the opposing votes to 3.55 million in one go.



The ENS DAO Security Committee was established in July 2024. At that time, both active participants in ENS DAO proposals and the number of votes were relatively low. To prevent major holders from using this opportunity to launch malicious proposals that could jeopardize the ENS DAO treasury exceeding $350 million, the DAO chose to establish the Security Committee, granting it direct veto power over malicious proposals through a 4/8 multisig.


However, the committee's power is limited to vetoing malicious proposals. It cannot interfere with the process of normal proposals, nor can it initiate proposals. Its authority is retained for only two years at a time for easy adjustment.


Logically, renewing the authority of such an organization protecting the DAO treasury before its term ends should be quite normal. Why would the ENS founder personally step in to vote against a proposal designed to protect the DAO?


To understand this seemingly 'authoritarian' decision, we need to trace back to a discussion about ENS DAO governance in November last year.


I mentioned this incident in the article "Seeing ENS Struggling with Governance, I Think It's Time to Talk About DAO Problems" (https://foresightnews.pro/article/detail/93316): In November 2025, Nick Johnson wrote a meaningful post on the forum, roughly stating that the ENS DAO was now full of political infighting, capable people were gradually leaving, and the leadership of the DAO had fallen into the hands of inexperienced individuals, or even those whose interests were not aligned with the protocol.


Also in that month, ENS DAO Secretary Limes submitted a proposal suggesting that at the end of the sixth term, i.e., December 31, 2025, the operations of the three working groups—Metagovernance, Ecosystem, and Public Goods—be terminated. As for the reasons, firstly, because proposals had become a game of 'you support me, I support you,' with no one caring about what should actually be done; secondly, the lack of entry criteria led to the frequent phenomenon of 'bad money driving out good.' Limes believed that process improvements could not solve this structural deep-rooted problem, and shutting down was the only way out.


Although this proposal ultimately did not pass, Nick's desire for DAO reform was already clear.


On June 19, ENS COO Katherine Wu posted a new proposal on the ENS forum: "Next Era of ENS DAO: Empowering the ENS Foundation." The core contents of the proposal are twofold: first, to transfer daily operations, treasury management, and long-term capital strategy to a restructured ENS Foundation. The Foundation would be responsible for daily treasury operations, public goods grants, working group coordination, ecosystem strategy, trademark/brand assets, etc. Additionally, the Foundation would establish a 5-member board of directors to enhance professional execution and accountability.


Second, it commits that the DAO and token holders will retain core powers, including protocol-layer governance contract upgrades, registry control, fee structure, constitutional amendments, etc.


The biggest point of contention in this proposal is the DAO treasury. Critics believe this would allow the Foundation and, by extension, ENS Labs behind it, to effectively control the massive funds, weakening the direct influence of token holders. ENS original constitution author Brantly Millegan expressed strong opposition, arguing that it violates the DAO's original design where token holders should simultaneously control both the protocol and the treasury, essentially implying that ENS Labs wants direct control of the treasury.



This is a conflict between decentralization fundamentalists and practical operators. One side does not believe inefficiency justifies the Foundation 'seizing power' from the DAO, while the other, after years of ups and downs, still believes that centralization, at least for now, is more beneficial for the project's development.


Nick's over 3 million opposing votes are seen as the first shot fired in the power war.


However, Nick himself also provided an explanation. His opposition stems from concerns that the current committee's power lacks sufficient checks and balances, and a two-year extension would solidify these issues. Additionally, he worries that some members might use the veto power for political purposes, blocking ordinary proposals they personally dislike, rather than limiting it to genuinely urgent situations.


In response, Katherine released a new proposal that raised the threshold for veto execution (from 4/8 to 5/8), implemented stricter power limitations, and added member removal mechanisms, among other things, to prevent power concentration.



Data shows ENS's annual revenue exceeded $10 million in 2023, declined to $7 million in 2024, and had fallen to less than $2 million in 2025. When there is enough money, no one cares how it is spent; but when the industry is in a downturn and revenue is falling, even assets worth several hundred million dollars require careful planning.


Nick's substantial holdings of ENS are enough for him to implement these changes, but the forced implementation of change via the token-holding 'bug' leaves Nick with no retreat. The new Foundation must perform at least better than the DAO. 'How to do it' is the problem Nick must solve in the next phase. Hopefully, the ENS core team already has the answer.

Trending Cryptos

Related Questions

QWhy did ENS founder Nick Johnson vote against renewing the security committee's veto power?

ANick Johnson voted against the renewal because he was concerned about a lack of sufficient checks and balances on the committee's power. He worried that a two-year renewal would solidify these issues and that some members might misuse the veto for political purposes to block ordinary proposals they personally disliked, rather than only for genuine emergencies.

QWhat are the two main proposed changes in Katherine Wu's 'Next Era of ENS DAO' proposal?

AThe two main proposals are: 1) Transferring daily operations, treasury management, and long-term capital strategy to a restructured ENS Foundation, which would handle daily treasury operations, public goods grants, working group coordination, ecosystem strategy, and brand assets. 2) Ensuring that the DAO and token holders retain core powers, including protocol-level governance, contract upgrades, registry control, fee structure changes, and constitutional amendments.

QWhat was the core controversy surrounding the proposed new ENS Foundation?

AThe core controversy centered on the DAO treasury. Critics, including ENS's original constitution author Brantly Millegan, argued that the proposal would allow the Foundation (and by extension, ENS Labs) to gain practical control over the massive treasury funds, thereby weakening the direct influence of token holders. This was seen as a move away from the original DAO design where token holders controlled both the protocol and the treasury.

QWhat problems did Nick Johnson and Limes identify with ENS DAO's governance in late 2025?

AThey identified significant political infighting within the DAO, where competent people were leaving and leadership was falling into the hands of individuals who lacked experience or had interests misaligned with the protocol's. Limes specifically noted that proposal-making had become a reciprocal 'you support me, I support you' game, with a lack of focus on necessary work, and that the absence of entry standards led to a 'bad money driving out good' phenomenon.

QHow did Katherine Wu attempt to address the concerns about the security committee's power after Nick's vote?

AIn response to the concerns raised by Nick Johnson's vote, Katherine Wu submitted a new proposal to reform the security committee. The key changes included raising the threshold for executing a veto (from 4/8 to 5/8 members), implementing stricter power limitations, and adding a mechanism for removing committee members, all aimed at preventing the concentration of power.

Related Reads

Robinhood Chain Mainnet Goes Live: Can Stocks Finally Be Moved Into Wallets?

Robinhood has officially launched its public mainnet, Robinhood Chain, along with stock-like tokens, the USDG yield product, and a DeFi lending portal. This marks a significant shift where a major online broker is integrating its user interface, regulatory compliance, self-custody wallet, and on-chain protocols into a single, streamlined experience. The goal is to simplify access to stock exposure, stablecoin yields, collateralized lending, and AMM trading for mainstream users. Eligible non-U.S. users can hold these "Stock Tokens"—structured as tokenized debt securities—in the Robinhood Wallet for 24/7 exposure to assets like U.S. stocks or ETFs. U.S. users can access an estimated ~7% APY on dollar-backed USDG through the Robinhood Earn program via self-custody wallets, with lending infrastructure powered by Morpho protocol. Built as a Layer 2 on Arbitrum, Robinhood Chain leverages existing DeFi protocols like Uniswap. The core strategy is not to reinvent DeFi but to channel Robinhood's large traditional finance user base (27.4 million funded customers as of Q1 2026) into on-chain finance, lowering the technical barriers. However, key limitations exist. The stock tokens are not direct equity ownership and are unavailable in the U.S. and some jurisdictions due to regulatory constraints. The ~7% yield is variable and carries inherent DeFi risks, not guaranteed principal protection. Furthermore, while AMMs enable trading, price discovery for major stocks will likely remain anchored in traditional markets like NASDAQ for the foreseeable future. Ultimately, Robinhood Chain is an early experiment in "on-chain brokerage." Its success will depend on real-world metrics like trading volume, sustained user migration to self-custody, stable yield performance, and regulatory feedback, rather than its launch narrative.

marsbit3m ago

Robinhood Chain Mainnet Goes Live: Can Stocks Finally Be Moved Into Wallets?

marsbit3m ago

Circle CEO Responds to OUSD Challenge: Stablecoin Market Is 'Winner-Takes-All', Consortium Model Doomed to Fail

Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire addresses market concerns following the announcement of the Open USD (OUSD) stablecoin project backed by 140 global companies. Allaire argues the stablecoin market exhibits "winner-takes-all" dynamics due to powerful network effects. He cites USDC's near-decade lead in three key areas: 1) **Application Integration & Protocol Development**: Thousands of integrated services and protocols (like CCTP) create utility and lock-in for developers and users. 2) **Liquidity Network Effects**: A deeply embedded, globally distributed liquidity infrastructure across primary and secondary markets, built over years. 3) **Regulatory Integration**: Extensive licensing and compliance groundwork ensuring USDC's acceptance in major markets like Europe and Japan. Allaire challenges OUSD's proposed advantages. He contends that promises of free redemption, while appealing, face market realities where such models can become exit routes for other stablecoins. He also questions the feasibility of fully distributing all revenue to an alliance, stating it would "starve" the critical infrastructure investments needed for scale and utility. Furthermore, he expresses skepticism about large alliance governance models, noting they often lead to slow decision-making and misaligned incentives. While welcoming OUSD to the ecosystem, Allaire reaffirms confidence in USDC's dominant position, backed by its long-term infrastructure investments and strong partnerships, including its ongoing collaboration with Coinbase.

marsbit5m ago

Circle CEO Responds to OUSD Challenge: Stablecoin Market Is 'Winner-Takes-All', Consortium Model Doomed to Fail

marsbit5m ago

Circle CEO Responds to OUSD Challenge: Alliance Model Doomed to Fail, It's a 'Winner-Takes-All' Game

Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire addresses the challenge posed by the new Open USD (OUSD) stablecoin project, backed by 140 global companies. He argues that the stablecoin market exhibits "winner-take-all" characteristics, where USDC's near-decade-long lead in application integrations, global liquidity, and regulatory compliance secures its dominant position. Allaire outlines three key network effects underpinning USDC's strength: 1) Extensive integration as an internet protocol layer, 2) Deep, globally distributed liquidity networks, and 3) Deep integration with global policy and regulatory frameworks. He cites data showing USDC facilitated 80% of on-chain USD stablecoin transaction volume in Q1 2026. He directly counters OUSD's proposed advantages: 1) "Free minting and redemption" may not be sustainable against market realities, which USDC addresses via contractual mechanisms. 2) "Sharing all revenue" risks starving the infrastructure of necessary investment for growth and reliability. 3) A "consortium model" often leads to slow innovation and poor coordination compared to focused, independent operators like Circle. Allaire reaffirms Circle's strong partnership with Coinbase and notes that Circle continues to collaborate with many OUSD founding members. He concludes by welcoming OUSD to the ecosystem while expressing confidence in USDC's entrenched network advantages and continued expansion.

Odaily星球日报8m ago

Circle CEO Responds to OUSD Challenge: Alliance Model Doomed to Fail, It's a 'Winner-Takes-All' Game

Odaily星球日报8m ago

dYdX Changes Tack and Starts Anew, This Time Partnering with Robinhood: Will It Succeed?

On July 1st, dYdX Labs, in partnership with Robinhood Crypto, launched the Beta version of Arcus, a new decentralized exchange (DEX). Deployed on the newly launched Robinhood Chain (an L2 built on Arbitrum), Arcus supports spot trading for 95 tokenized stocks and plans to introduce cross-asset perpetual contracts. This marks a separate, new product line for the dYdX team, distinct from the existing dYdX Chain. Arcus's core features promise 24/7 trading, self-custody, and institutional-grade liquidity. Initial offerings include zero-fee web-based spot trading and a perpetual contracts testnet. Future plans involve using tokenized stocks as collateral and providing access to Pre-IPO investments. The platform is not available to users in the US, Canada, the UK, and other restricted jurisdictions. This move follows dYdX's v4 upgrade, which, while achieving full decentralization, faced criticism over performance and tokenomics, leading to a loss of market share. Arcus represents a strategic pivot, leveraging Robinhood's vast user base to target the RWA (Real World Assets) sector and global 24/7 trading. The dYdX Foundation clarified that Arcus is a parallel product incubated by dYdX Labs, and the original dYdX Chain continues to operate independently. While no official token plans have been announced, market participants speculate about potential new tokens or airdrops from the Arcus project.

Foresight News15m ago

dYdX Changes Tack and Starts Anew, This Time Partnering with Robinhood: Will It Succeed?

Foresight News15m ago

Trading

Spot

Hot Articles

How to Buy DAO

Welcome to HTX.com! We've made purchasing DAO Maker (DAO) simple and convenient. Follow our step-by-step guide to embark on your crypto journey.Step 1: Create Your HTX AccountUse your email or phone number to sign up for a free account on HTX. Experience a hassle-free registration journey and unlock all features.Get My AccountStep 2: Go to Buy Crypto and Choose Your Payment MethodCredit/Debit Card: Use your Visa or Mastercard to buy DAO Maker (DAO) instantly.Balance: Use funds from your HTX account balance to trade seamlessly.Third Parties: We've added popular payment methods such as Google Pay and Apple Pay to enhance convenience.P2P: Trade directly with other users on HTX.Over-the-Counter (OTC): We offer tailor-made services and competitive exchange rates for traders.Step 3: Store Your DAO Maker (DAO)After purchasing your DAO Maker (DAO), store it in your HTX account. Alternatively, you can send it elsewhere via blockchain transfer or use it to trade other cryptocurrencies.Step 4: Trade DAO Maker (DAO)Easily trade DAO Maker (DAO) on HTX's spot market. Simply access your account, select your trading pair, execute your trades, and monitor in real-time. We offer a user-friendly experience for both beginners and seasoned traders.

2.5k Total ViewsPublished 2024.03.29Updated 2026.06.02

How to Buy DAO

Discussions

Welcome to the HTX Community. Here, you can stay informed about the latest platform developments and gain access to professional market insights. Users' opinions on the price of DAO (DAO) are presented below.

活动图片