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ENS Governance Crisis: Decentralization = Low Quality and Inefficiency

ENS Governance Crisis: Decentralization Leads to Inefficiency and Mediocrity In November 2025, ENS founder Nick Johnson publicly criticized the state of ENS DAO, warning that political infighting was driving away dedicated contributors and risking the organization's takeover by inexperienced or self-interested participants. This sparked a broader discussion about systemic failures in the DAO's structure. Limes, the DAO's long-serving secretary, proposed dissolving three key working groups (Meta-Governance, Ecosystem, and Public Goods), arguing that the current structure incentivized relationship preservation over truth-seeking and lacked mechanisms to remove underperforming contributors. He highlighted that poor contributors drive out talented ones, and the system inherently discourages honesty. Multiple high-caliber contributors, including lawyers, programmers, and scientists, confirmed they had exited due to a toxic culture of gatekeeping, conflicts of interest, and self-dealing. Critical questions were discouraged, and the drafting of essential documents like a constitution was mishandled, leading to wasted funds and stagnation. Analyst clowes.eth noted that the working groups saw almost no new active participants throughout the year, and the governance model failed to attract or empower leaders. Participants avoided sharing honest opinions due to political repercussions, making mediocrity the norm. The core issue is distorted incentives: when future funding depends on relationships, the rational choice is to avoid criticism, leading to log-rolling (mutual proposal support), adverse selection (talented people leave), and low decision quality. This is compounded by the "DAO premium," where services cost 2-3 times more than in traditional organizations. The openness that initially empowered the DAO became its weakness, as it allowed participation based on availability rather than capability without quality control. Nick Johnson supported a "pause" rather than abolition of the groups, acknowledging concerns about the DAO's ability to meet legal obligations if professional contributors leave. The community split into two camps: one advocating for a comprehensive, paid audit before any structural changes, and another pushing for immediate dissolution and action. Deeper issues were highlighted, including a lack of transparency from ENS Labs, the core development team funded by the DAO, which operates opaquely despite its central role. The crisis underscores a fundamental challenge: in consensus-based systems, saying the truth carries high relational, political, and opportunity costs. Without mechanisms to reward honesty and ensure accountability, decentralization can lead to institutional silence and inefficiency. Proposed solutions range from radical ideas like stripping voting rights from service providers to pragmatic steps like creating a more centralized operational company (OpCo) within the DAO for better execution. The debate continues, with elections delayed and proposals under review. The crisis remains unresolved, but the organization's willingness to self-reflect and consider dismantling its own structure is a notable achievement in itself.

marsbit12/16 07:13

ENS Governance Crisis: Decentralization = Low Quality and Inefficiency

marsbit12/16 07:13

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