How Quadratic Funding Could Finance Your Dreams | Kevin Owocki | TED

41,940 views ・ 2024-10-05

TED


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In the summer of 2020, COVID was ravaging the world,
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and in my hometown of Boulder, Colorado,
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businesses were having a hard time staying afloat.
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I worked with the community to raise money for these businesses
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to help get them through this trying time.
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But it wasn't a normal funding campaign.
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It was driven by a new vision and way of funding
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that is ultimately more democratic,
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called quadratic funding.
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Quadratic funding is really, really new.
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It was invented by Glen Weyl at Microsoft,
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Vitalik Buterin of the Ethereum Foundation
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and Zoë Hitzig, a PhD economist.
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In September 2018, they set out to write a paper
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that would have a new vision
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for a mathematically optimal way to fund community goods.
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Quadratic funding is basically a crowdfunding campaign,
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but it's not like a Patreon where creators sell subscriptions.
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And it's not like a Kickstarter,
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in that it leverages a matching funds mechanism
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to match contributions from everyday donors.
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It's a mathematical formula
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that results in a fairer way to distribute funds.
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Here's the formula.
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Maybe it looks a bit daunting to you,
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especially if you don't like Greek letters,
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but it's really powerful
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and I'm going to show you why it's so cool.
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It's basically a matching campaign. So how does it work?
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Someone who's civic minded
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raises a pool of funding to stimulate a community.
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This could be a local philanthropist that wants to give back,
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or a civic leader that wants to stimulate economic recovery.
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Second, projects sign up for a crowdfunding campaign.
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This could be local businesses that have a civic-minded mission,
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or it could be any group of neighbors who wants to help out the community.
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And then third, you run a crowdfunding campaign
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in which the everyday citizens in these communities
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contribute to the projects that are in the campaign,
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and those contributions are matched by the matching pool.
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Now here's the cool thing about quadratic funding
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that makes it into a funding power tool.
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When the contributions from the crowd are matched by the matching pool,
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they're matched more on the basis
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of the breadth of contributors to each project
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as opposed to the depth of their contributions.
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And this is really, really powerful.
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Let's run through an example of how.
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Let's say you have a million-dollar matching pool
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for a seaside town's restoration campaign,
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and the first project, a marina, is favored by wealthy donors.
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It raises 500K from one contributor.
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The second project raises 500K from 10,000 contributors.
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Let's say it's something that's more popular
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in everyday members of the community, like revitalizing the downtown.
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With quadratic funding,
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that second project will get way more of the matching pool,
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even though they raised the same amount of money,
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and in one-to-one matching,
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they would get the same amount from the matching pool.
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With quadratic funding,
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99 percent of the funds will go to that second project.
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OK, so this is what makes quadratic funding a tool
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for funding what everyday members of the community want.
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It leverages a matching funds mechanism
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that disproportionately rewards projects with a broader base of support
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over the ones that are supported by small donors.
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Alright, so now that we have an intuition for how this works --
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many small donors are more powerful than one large donor --
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let's take a look at the math.
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This equation basically says
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that the amount coming from the matching pool
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is proportional to the sum of the square roots of each contribution,
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all of that squared.
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Now, that might sound like a mouthful,
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but basically the reason why we call this quadratic funding
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is that it leverages squares and square roots
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in order to determine the matching amounts.
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So let's run through an example
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so that you develop an intuition for how this math works.
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Let's say we're running a QF campaign for two different projects.
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And the first project raises 10 dollars from 10 contributors.
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So ten contributions of one dollar each.
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And the second project, favored by wealthy donors,
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raises 10 dollars from one contributor.
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Let's apply the quadratic math to this campaign
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and figure out who's going to get the most matching.
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The first thing we have to do
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is we have to sum the square roots of each contribution.
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So the square root of one is one and one plus one plus one equals 10.
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So that's the first project.
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The second project received one contribution of 10 dollars.
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We take the square root of that. And that's roughly three.
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So you can see in this portion of the formula
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how it starts to break down the contributions of the larger donors
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with the square root,
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but it doesn't affect the small donors as much.
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Next, let's take the sum of the square roots
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and let's square those.
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Ten squared is 100,
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and roughly three squared is about nine.
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Here you can develop an intuition for the second half of this formula,
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and how it's widening the distance between the projects
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that have a broader base of support
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and the one favored by a large donor.
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And finally we have our matching proportions.
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90% of the funding is going to go to the project
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that has a broader base of support.
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OK, so that's how the math works.
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Many small donors are more powerful than one large donor.
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And there's a counterintuitive implication of this that is extremely powerful.
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If we were doing a 1000- or 10,000-dollar-matching pool
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in that example,
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then when you give to that first project,
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you are allocating tens or hundreds of dollars in the campaign.
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So this gets lots of people off their butts
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to contribute to quadratic funding campaigns.
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What's better? You give a dollar and a project gets a dollar,
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because of no matching.
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You give a dollar and a project gets two dollars
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because of one-to-one matching.
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Or you give a dollar and a project gets hundreds of dollars
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because the matching pool was well-funded
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and that project got enough small donors supporting it.
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OK? So because of these matching multiples
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we're starting to see lots of people contribute to quadratic funding campaigns
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when we run them.
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And because of that, we're able to develop a high-resolution view
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of what constituencies that run quadratic funding campaigns
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actually care about.
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This is what we call a preference map
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from a recent quadratic funding campaign that we've run.
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And each circle is a donor or a grant that they gave to.
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So we see in high resolution what communities actually care about,
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and by care about I don't mean that they hit a like button.
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They actually gave a dollar of their own money
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to the projects in their community
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on the basis of what they see in their community.
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In analog democracies, we get a signal every couple of years
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and an up or down vote of what people actually care about,
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but with quadratic funding,
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we can get it more frequent
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if we run these campaigns every three or six months,
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and more high-resolution view of what matters to everyday citizens.
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And then we can take the projects
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that are supported in the quadratic funding campaign,
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and build relationships between those in power
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and those who are doing the most good in their communities.
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Quadratic funding isn't just for downtowns that want to revitalize after a pandemic.
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And it's not just for seaside projects that want to revitalize themselves either.
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Any community that wants to fund what matters to everyday people
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can use a quadratic funding campaign to do so.
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The cycle can be kicked off by a philanthropist
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that wants to give back, but isn't sure to what,
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a digital community that wants to fund what matters to everyday people
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can use quadratic funding,
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and it can be used by cities, states or countries
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that want to revitalize their democracies.
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Know any of those?
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Quadratic funding scales.
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In just about six years,
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it's been used to fund 60 million dollars worth of community goods
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through 270,000 unique contributors and four million unique contributions.
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It has funded 4,000 creators,
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extending a civic lifeline to the people
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who have the most legitimacy in these communities.
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The tech to do quadratic funding is available today.
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In the last year, my team at Gitcoin has developed open-source software
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that anyone can pull down and run a quadratic funding campaign
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in their community today.
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Now I've got to address --
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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I've got to address the elephant in the room for a second.
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You may have guessed by the name of my startup,
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Gitcoin with a G,
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that I am indeed a crypto bro.
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(Laughter)
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I plead guilty.
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Crypto doesn't have the best reputation, and probably deservedly so,
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but I'm a part of the crypto movement that cares deeply about community goods,
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things like open-source software,
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and we want to see those things funded.
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You wouldn't throw out all of the internet because of a couple of bad websites,
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so please don't throw out all of crypto because of Scam Bankman-Fried.
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(Laughter and applause)
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My flavor of crypto bro cares deeply about community goods
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and quadratic funding.
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It's an example of something good that was pioneered in crypto
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and is now starting to go mainstream.
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If you want to run a quadratic funding campaign
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in your Ethereum-based community,
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you can use Gitcoin Grants, our software, to do that.
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But if you don't care about the whole crypto thing,
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we've built a tool called SimpleGrants.xyz
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that will allow you to fund what matters in your community
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using quadratic funding in US dollars, euros, Japanese yen
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or any of the hundreds of currencies that we support.
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This tool is available as open-source software,
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which means that anyone can download it
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and run it without needing anything from me.
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But if you need something,
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me and my team are available to talk about best practices
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and to help you support your community.
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Now I don't want to oversell quadratic funding.
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It's not perfect, or I guess said another way,
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it works under very specific scenarios.
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First, you need someone who's going to put up the matching pool.
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Second, that person has to be comfortable with other people distributing the funds.
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Third, we need the ability to stop people from falsifying identities.
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And fourth, we need to stop the ability to collude with each other.
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Basically, situations where if you contribute to my project,
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I'll contribute to yours.
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That's collusion.
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But these are solvable problems.
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And I know that because I've solved them hundreds of times
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through trial and error
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in the quadratic funding campaigns that I've run.
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American sociobiologist Edward Wilson once said,
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the real problem with humanity is we've got Paleolithic emotions,
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medieval institutions and godlike technology.
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I think that with all of the amazing technology
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that we've got available today,
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we should be able to upgrade our institutions
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and use technology for the civic good.
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Fund what matters to everyday people.
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Quadratic funding is one way we can do that.
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It's not the only way,
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but it's part of an ecology of 21st-century digital democratic tools
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that are going to allow us to support the voices
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of a general, diverse population
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and create community engagement and collective action,
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and all in a way that feels more like using a slick app
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than going to the DMV.
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I want to see us fund what matters to everyday people in the 21st century,
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and upgrade our institutions to be digitally native.
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Quadratic funding is one way we can do that.
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Thank you for coming to my TED talk.
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(Laughter and applause)
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