Wifei: "I like the one designed difference that i don't like is, you know, all of everything is proxy upgradable. I want to get to a point where it's not even proxy ubgradable" She says she wants people to vote with their liquidity and then move on to the next contract. Wifei thinks there are two types of government in Wifa - open-ended or codified. Butya: "Let let governments formulate how t oncs to work."...
We return for the second half of our interview with Andre Cronje, a long-time DeFi developer, and creator of Yearn Finance. You can think of Yearn as a smart bank account that automatically allocates your assets to different low-risk investment strategies that execute on the Ethereum blockchain.
My co-host is Tarun Chitra, the CEO and founder of Gauntlet, a company that helps stress test the incentive structures and economics of cryptocurrency protocols, especially of DeFi protocols.
In this episode, we explore governance in Yearn in particular and how governance in DeFi should work in general. What roles exist, and how can we align their incentives? Is governance a feature to be tokenized and sold off, or an attack vector to be closed? How does the price of a governance token affect the security of its parent protocol? And why does Andre eventually want to retreat from being the lead developer of Yearn Finance?
Yearn Finance
Gauntlet
Hasu's article "Is Yearn.finance safe to use?"
Episode Transcript