Distributed Autonomous Community / Decentralized Application: Difference between revisions
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* [http://invictus-innovations.com/i-dac/ What is a DAC?] | * [http://invictus-innovations.com/i-dac/ What is a DAC?] | ||
* [http://invictus-innovations.com/i-dac-1/ The Three Laws of Robotics for DACs] | * [http://invictus-innovations.com/i-dac-1/ The Three Laws of Robotics for DACs] | ||
* [https://github.com/DavidJohnstonCEO/DecentralizedApplications Decentralized Application] | |||
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[[Category:DACs]] | [[Category:DACs]] |
Revision as of 08:28, 12 January 2014
A Distributed Autonomous Community (DAC) is an "entity" without any central point of control, with a certain agenda, business plan, and protocol. A Decentralized Application or DA is an alternative formulation of a DAC. The concept is currently being developed by David Johnston.
There is an accelerating trend of more and more DACs being formed.
List of DACs
- Bitcoin itself, the first DAC?
- Altcurrencies, all of Bitcoin forks
- Ripple Labs is borderline ... they are a registered company and could be ordered to shutdown. The protocol is perhaps a DAC.
- Mastercoin, a DAC replacement for Forex, Shares, and much more. Later evolved into a ProtoShares competitor.
- ProtoShares, a meta DAC with the purpose of provding infrastructure for other DACs. It is composed of
- DomainShares, a DAC replacement for Namecoin
- BitShares, a competitor to Mastercoin
- Keyhotee, a DAC replacement for OpenID
- Other infrastructure components to follow... ?
- Mitosys - a DAC replacement for Bit-Message
- Colored Coins are working on defining themselves as a DAC ... no working business model spotted yet.
Ideas
- A social network - Monetizable Diaspora