DAO Governance

Governance Philosophy

Nonterritorial is not a company. It's infrastructure for art circulation—and infrastructure should be governed by those who use it.

Traditional art institutions are governed by boards of wealthy donors. Platforms are governed by shareholders seeking returns. DAOs often become plutocracies where largest token holders control everything.

We're building something different: multi-stakeholder governance where artists, hosts, and community share power according to their contribution to cultural circulation, not their financial holdings.

Multi-Stakeholder Model

Who Governs?

Four stakeholder groups share governance power:

Artists & Curators The creators. Those who make the work that circulates. Their voice ensures the network serves artistic vision, not just efficiency or profit.

Hosts The circulators. Those who bring art to communities. Their voice ensures the network remains practical, accessible, and genuinely useful.

Verification Nodes The validators. Those who ensure quality and authenticity. Their voice ensures technical integrity and network reliability.

Community / Foundation The supporters and stewards. Early participants who funded development, plus the foundation during its sunset period.

Power Distribution

Voting power shifts over time toward direct stakeholders:

Stakeholder
Year 1
Year 3
Year 5
Year 10

Artists/Curators

40%

40%

42%

45%

Hosts

25%

28%

32%

35%

Verification Nodes

20%

20%

18%

15%

Foundation

10%

7%

4%

0%

Community Fund

5%

5%

4%

5%

Key trajectory: Foundation power goes to zero. Artists and hosts gain power. The network becomes genuinely autonomous.

Why This Distribution?

Artists at 40-45% Art circulation exists to serve artists. Their interests should be primary. But not absolute—other stakeholders have legitimate interests too.

Hosts at 25-35% Without hosts, there's no circulation. Their practical experience grounds governance in reality. Power increases as network matures and their contribution becomes clearer.

Verification Nodes at 15-20% Technical integrity matters. But validators shouldn't dominate—they're service providers, not primary stakeholders. Power decreases as automated verification improves.

Foundation at 10% → 0% The foundation builds infrastructure, then steps back. Permanent foundation control would defeat the purpose of decentralized governance.

Governance Structure

The DAO

The Nonterritorial DAO is the primary governance body:

Governance Token

Governance tokens represent voting power:

Token Properties

  • Non-transferable (cannot be traded)

  • Earned through participation (creating, hosting, verifying)

  • Decay over time (prevents accumulation without ongoing participation)

  • Weighted by stakeholder type (artist tokens weighted differently than host tokens)

Token Earning

Activity
Tokens Earned

Exhibition accepted to network

1,000 base + ongoing based on licensing

Completing license as host

100 base + proportional to fee

Verification submission

10 per verified license

Community contribution

Variable based on impact

Token Decay

Tokens decay by 20% annually if holder isn't actively participating. This prevents:

  • Early participants dominating forever

  • Inactive wallets controlling votes

  • Token accumulation as speculation

Working Groups

Specialized committees handle specific domains:

Curation Committee

  • Reviews exhibition submissions

  • Sets quality standards

  • Approves commissioning grants

  • Composition: Majority artists/curators

Technical Committee

  • Oversees protocol development

  • Reviews security measures

  • Manages verification node network

  • Composition: Technical experts + stakeholder representatives

Treasury Committee

  • Manages operational funds

  • Allocates commissioning budget

  • Reviews financial sustainability

  • Composition: Multi-stakeholder with financial expertise

Dispute Resolution

  • Handles conflicts between participants

  • Reviews verification appeals

  • Makes binding decisions on disputes

  • Composition: Rotating stakeholder panel

Decision-Making Process

Proposal Lifecycle

1

Idea

Community discussion, informal feedback.

2

Draft

Formal proposal written, categorized.

3

Review

7-day community review period.

4

Vote

On-chain voting (7–14 days).

5

Execution

If passed, implemented per timelock.

Proposal Categories

Different decisions require different thresholds:

Category
Examples
Required Approval

Standard

Fee adjustments, minor parameters

50% + 1 majority

Significant

Treasury allocations >€50K, new features

66% supermajority

Constitutional

Core principles, governance structure

80% supermajority

Quorum Requirements

For a vote to be valid:

Category
Minimum Participation

Standard

10% of voting power

Significant

20% of voting power

Constitutional

33% of voting power

Timelock

Passed proposals don't execute immediately:

Category
Delay Before Execution

Standard

48 hours

Significant

7 days

Constitutional

30 days

This allows participants to prepare for changes and, in extreme cases, exit if they disagree with major decisions.

Checks and Balances

Stakeholder Balance

No single stakeholder group can pass significant proposals alone. Approximate coalitions needed:

  • Artists (40%) + Hosts (25%) = 65% → Can pass most proposals

  • Artists (40%) + Nodes (20%) = 60% → Can pass standard proposals

  • Any single group = Cannot pass anything significant alone

Foundation Veto

During the sunset period (Years 1-5), the foundation retains limited veto power over proposals that would:

  • Fundamentally alter the anti-speculation architecture

  • Violate constitutional protections

  • Endanger network viability

This veto power expires completely by Year 5.

Constitutional Limits

Certain things cannot be changed regardless of vote:

  • Transfer functions remain disabled (immutable in contract)

  • Artist payment percentage cannot go below 30%

  • Multi-stakeholder structure must be preserved

  • Anti-speculation mechanisms cannot be removed

See Constitutional Protections for full details.

Participation Guide

For Artists

1

Create wallet and register as artist

Follow registration process to be recognized as an artist on the network.

2

Have exhibition accepted to network

Submit exhibitions for review and acceptance.

3

Receive governance tokens automatically

Tokens are granted based on accepted exhibitions and ongoing activity.

4

Vote on proposals affecting artist interests

Participate in governance using your earned tokens.

5

Propose changes through artist channels

Submit proposals or engage in community discussions to shape policy.

Key voting areas:

  • Commissioning fund allocations

  • Revenue split adjustments

  • Curation standards

  • Artist onboarding process

For Hosts

1

Register and become verified host

Complete host onboarding and verification steps.

2

Complete licensing (tokens earned per license)

Host licenses grant tokens proportional to activity/fees.

3

Vote on proposals affecting host operations

Use governance tokens to influence host-related decisions.

4

Propose improvements to hosting experience

Submit proposals or collaborate on host-focused initiatives.

Key voting areas:

  • Fee structures

  • Technical requirements

  • Host verification process

  • Platform features

For Everyone

Stay informed:

  • Governance forum: [Link]

  • Proposal notifications: [Subscribe]

  • Community calls: [Calendar]

  • Documentation updates: [Changelog]


Governance Documentation | Nonterritorial Network Building permanent infrastructure for art to circulate freely

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