ZIP: Unassigned Title: Establishing a Hybrid Dev Fund for ZF, ZCG and a Dev Fund Reserve Owners: Jack Gavigan <jack@zfnd.org> Credits: The ZIP 1014 Authors Status: Withdrawn Category: Consensus Process Created: 2024-07-01 License: MIT Discussions-To: Pull-Request:
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", and "MAY" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 1 when, and only when, they appear in all capitals.
The term "network upgrade" in this document is to be interpreted as described in ZIP 200 6 and the Zcash Trademark Donation and License Agreement (4 or successor agreement).
The terms "block subsidy" and "halving" in this document are to be interpreted as described in sections 3.10 and 7.8 of the Zcash Protocol Specification. 2
"Electric Coin Company", also called "ECC", refers to the US-incorporated Zerocoin Electric Coin Company, LLC.
"Bootstrap Project", also called "BP", refers to the US-incorporated 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation of that name.
"Zcash Foundation", also called "ZF", refers to the US-incorporated 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation of that name.
"Financial Privacy Foundation", also called "FPF", refers to the Cayman Islands-incorporated non-profit foundation company limited by guarantee of that name.
"Autonomous Entities" refers to committees, DAOs, teams or other groups to which FPF provides operations, administrative, and financial management support.
"Section 501(c)(3)" refers to that section of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code (Title 26 of the U.S. Code). 14
"Zcash Community Advisory Panel", also called "ZCAP", refers to the panel of community members assembled by the Zcash Foundation and described at 13.
The terms "Testnet" and "Mainnet" are to be interpreted as described in section 3.12 of the Zcash Protocol Specification 3.
“Lockbox” refers to a deferred funding pool of issued Zcash value as described in ZIP 2001 12.
“Dev Fund Reserve”, also called “DFR”, refers to the funds that are to be stored in the Lockbox as a result of the changes described in this ZIP.
This proposal describes a structure for a new Zcash Development Fund (“Dev Fund”), to be enacted in Network Upgrade 6 and last for 2 years. This Dev Fund shall consist of 20% of the block subsidies.
The Dev Fund shall be split into 3 slices:
The Lockbox will securely store funds until a disbursement mechanism is established in a future ZIP.
Governance and accountability are based on existing entities and legal mechanisms, and increasingly decentralized governance is encouraged.
Starting at Zcash's second halving in November 2024, the first Dev Fund will expire, meaning that by default 100% of the block subsidies will be allocated to miners, and no further funds will be automatically allocated to any other entities. Consequently, no substantial new funding may be available to existing teams dedicated to furthering charitable, educational, or scientific purposes, such as research, development, and outreach: the Electric Coin Company (ECC), the Zcash Foundation (ZF), and the many entities funded by the ZF grants and Zcash Community Grants programs.
There is a need to continue to strike a balance between incentivizing the security of the consensus protocol (i.e., mining) versus crucial charitable, educational, and/or scientific aspects, such as research, development and outreach.
Furthermore, there is a need to balance the sustenance of ongoing work by the current teams dedicated to Zcash, with encouraging decentralization and growth of independent development teams.
For these reasons, the Zcash Community desires to allocate and contribute a slice of the block subsidies otherwise allocated to miners as a donation to support charitable, educational, and scientific activities within the meaning of Section 501(c)(3) of Title 26 of the United States Code, and the Cayman Islands’ Foundation Companies Law, 2017.
The Zcash Community also supports the concept of a non-direct funding model, and desires to allocate a slice of the block subsidies otherwise allocated to miners to a Lockbox, with the expectation that those funds will be distributed under a non-direct funding model, which may be implemented in a future network upgrade.
For these reasons, the Zcash Community wishes to establish a Hybrid Development Fund after the second halving in November 2024, and apportion it among ZF, ZCG, and a Dev Fund Reserve to be held in a Lockbox.
The Dev Fund should encourage decentralization of the Zcash ecosystem, by supporting new teams dedicated to Zcash.
The Dev Fund should maintain the existing teams and capabilities in the Zcash ecosystem, unless and until concrete opportunities arise to create even greater value for the Zcash ecosystem.
There should not be any single entity which is a single point of failure, i.e., whose capture or failure will effectively prevent effective use of the funds.
Major funding decisions should be based, to the extent feasible, on inputs from domain experts and pertinent stakeholders.
The Dev Fund mechanism itself should not modify the monetary emission curve (and in particular, should not irrevocably burn coins).
In case the value of ZEC jumps, the Dev Fund recipients should not wastefully use excessive amounts of funds. Conversely, given market volatility and eventual halvings, it is desirable to create rainy-day reserves.
The Dev Fund mechanism should not reduce users' financial privacy or security. In particular, it should not cause them to expose their coin holdings, nor cause them to maintain access to secret keys for much longer than they would otherwise. (This rules out some forms of voting, and of disbursing coins to past/future miners.)
The new Dev Fund system should be simple to understand and realistic to implement. In particular, it should not assume the creation of new mechanisms (e.g., election systems) or entities (for governance or development) for its execution; but it should strive to support and use these once they are built.
The Dev Fund should comply with legal, regulatory, and taxation constraints in pertinent jurisdictions.
The Lockbox must be prepared to allocate resources efficiently once the disbursement mechanism is defined. This includes ensuring that funds are readily available for future projects and not tied up in organizational overhead.
The Lockbox must implement robust security measures to protect against unauthorized access or misuse of funds. It must not be possible to disburse funds from the Lockbox until the Zcash Community reaches consensus on the design of a disbursement mechanism that is defined in a ZIP and implemented as part of a future Network Upgrade.
General on-chain governance is outside the scope of this proposal.
Rigorous voting mechanisms (whether coin-weighted, holding-time-weighted or one-person-one-vote) are outside the scope of this proposal, though there is prescribed room for integrating them once available.
The mechanism by which funds held in the Dev Fund Reserve Lockbox are to be distributed is outside the scope of this proposal.
Consensus changes implied by this specification are applicable to the Zcash Mainnet. Similar (but not necessarily identical) consensus changes SHOULD be applied to the Zcash Testnet for testing purposes.
Starting at the second Zcash halving in 2024, until block height 3566400 (which is expected to occur approximately two years after the second Zcash halving), 20% of the block subsidy of each block SHALL be allocated to a Dev Fund that consists of the following three slices:
The slices are described in more detail below. The fund flow will be implemented at the consensus-rule layer, by sending the corresponding ZEC to the designated address(es) for each block. This Dev Fund will end at block height 3566400 (unless extended/modified by a future ZIP).
This slice of the Dev Fund will flow as charitable contributions from the Zcash Community to ZF, to be used at its discretion for any purpose within its mandate to support financial privacy and the Zcash platform, including: development, education, supporting community communication online and via events, gathering community sentiment, and awarding external grants for all of the above, subject to the requirements of Section 501(c)(3). The ZF slice will be treated as a charitable contribution from the Community to support these educational, charitable, and scientific purposes.
This slice of the Dev Fund is intended to fund independent teams entering the Zcash ecosystem, to perform major ongoing development (or other work) for the public good of the Zcash ecosystem, to the extent that such teams are available and effective.
The funds SHALL be received and administered by FPF. FPF MUST disburse them for "Zcash Community Grants" and expenses reasonably related to the administration of Zcash Community Grants, but subject to the following additional constraints:
The Zcash Community Grants Committee's decisions relating to the allocation and disbursement of funds from the Discretionary Budget will be final, requiring no approval from the FPF Board, but are subject to veto if FPF judges them to violate Cayman law or the FPF's reporting requirements and other (current or future) obligations under Cayman Islands law.
As part of the contractual commitment specified under the Enforcement section below, FPF SHALL be contractually required to recognize the ZCG slice of the Dev Fund as a Restricted Fund donation under the above constraints (suitably formalized), and keep separate accounting of its balance and usage under its Transparency and Accountability obligations defined below.
This slice of the Dev Fund is to be stored in a Lockbox until such time as the Zcash Community reaches consensus on the design of a disbursement mechanism that is defined in a ZIP and implemented as part of a future Network Upgrade.
ZF, FPF and Zcash Community Grant recipients (during and leading to their award period) SHALL all accept the obligations in this section.
Ongoing public reporting requirements:
These reports may be either organization-wide, or restricted to the income, expenses, and work associated with the receipt of Dev Fund.
It is expected that ZF, FPF and Zcash Community Grant recipients will be focused primarily (in their attention and resources) on Zcash. Thus, they MUST promptly disclose:
BP, ECC, ZF, FPF and grant recipients MUST promptly disclose any security or privacy risks that may affect users of Zcash (by responsible disclosure under confidence to the pertinent developers, where applicable).
ZF's and FPF's annual reports on its non-grant operations, SHOULD be at least as detailed as grant proposals/reports submitted by other funded parties, and satisfy similar levels of public scrutiny.
All substantial software whose development was funded by the Dev Fund SHOULD be released under an Open Source license (as defined by the Open Source Initiative 5), preferably the MIT license.
The ZF SHALL continue to operate the Zcash Community Advisory Panel and SHOULD work toward making it more representative and independent (more on that below).
For grant recipients, these conditions SHOULD be included in their contract with FPF, such that substantial violation, not promptly remedied, will cause forfeiture of their grant funds and their return to FPF.
ZF and FPF MUST contractually commit to each other to fulfill these conditions, and the prescribed use of funds, such that substantial violation, not promptly remedied, will permit the other parties to issue a modified version of Zcash node software that removes the violating party's Dev Fund slice, and use the Zcash trademark for this modified version. The slice's funds will be reassigned to ZCG (whose integrity is legally protected by the Restricted Fund treatment).
Nothing in this ZIP is intended to preclude any amendments to the Dev Fund (including but not limited to, changes to the Dev Fund allocation and/or the addition of new Dev Fund recipients), if such amendments enjoy the consensus support of the Zcash community.
Nothing in this ZIP is intended to preclude replacement of the Dev Fund with a different mechanism for ecosystem development funding.
ZF and FPF SHOULD facilitate the amendment or replacement of the Dev Fund if there is sufficient community support for doing so.
This ZIP recognizes there is strong community support for a non-direct funding model. As such, ZF MUST collaborate with the Zcash community to research and explore the establishment of a non-direct funding model. The research should consider potential designs as well as possible legal and regulatory risks.
Decentralized community governance is used in this proposal via the Zcash Community Advisory Panel as input into the Zcash Community Grants Committee which governs the ZCG slice (Zcash Community Grants).
It is highly desirable to develop robust means of decentralized community voting and governance, either by expanding the Zcash Community Advisory Panel or a successor mechanism. ZF, FPF and ZCG SHOULD place high priority on such development and its deployment, in their activities and grant selection.
Members of ZF's Board of Directors MUST NOT hold equity in ECC or have current business or employment relationships with ECC or BP.
The Zcash Foundation SHOULD endeavor to use the Zcash Community Advisory Panel (or successor mechanism) as advisory input for future board elections.
Members of FPF's Board of Directors MUST NOT hold equity in ECC or have current business or employment relationships with ECC or BP.
This proposal is a modification of ZIP 1014 11 by the Zcash Foundation based on feedback and suggestions from the community, and incorporating elements of draft ZIPs by community members Jason McGee and Skylar.
ZIP 1014 is a limited modification of Eran Tromer's ZIP 1012 10 by the Zcash Foundation and ECC, further modified by feedback from the community.
Eran's proposal is most closely based on the Matt Luongo 'Decentralize the Dev Fee' proposal (ZIP 1011) 9. Relative to ZIP 1011 there are substantial changes and mixing in of elements from @aristarchus's '20% Split Evenly Between the ECC and the Zcash Foundation' (ZIP 1003) 7, Josh Cincinnati's 'Compromise Dev Fund Proposal With Diverse Funding Streams' (ZIP 1010) 8, and extensive discussions in the Zcash Community Forum, including valuable comments from forum users @aristarchus and @dontbeevil.
1 | Information on BCP 14 — "RFC 2119: Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels" and "RFC 8174: Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words" |
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2 | Zcash Protocol Specification, Version 2021.2.16 or later |
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3 | Zcash Protocol Specification, Version 2021.2.16. Section 3.12: Mainnet and Testnet |
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4 | Zcash Trademark Donation and License Agreement |
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5 | The Open Source Definition |
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6 | ZIP 200: Network Upgrade Mechanism |
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7 | ZIP 1003: 20% Split Evenly Between the ECC and the Zcash Foundation, and a Voting System Mandate |
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8 | ZIP 1010: Compromise Dev Fund Proposal With Diverse Funding Streams |
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9 | ZIP 1011: Decentralize the Dev Fee |
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10 | ZIP 1012: Dev Fund to ECC + ZF + Major Grants |
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11 | ZIP 1014: Establishing a Dev Fund for ECC, ZF, and Major Grants |
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12 | ZIP 2001: Lockbox Funding Streams |
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13 | Zcash Community Advisory Panel |
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14 | U.S. Code, Title 26, Section 501(c)(3) |
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