When DAOs Meet Neighborhood Committees: How the "Happiness Index" Under Merkle Trees Is Reshaping Grassroots Governance

BTC-2,88%

Recently, prediction markets have become very popular. I have a new concept that might support some cool experiments.

The idea isn’t originally mine; it comes from a very mind-bending paper. The author is one of the “grandmasters” of crypto—Ralph Merkle. In a radical proposal, he suggested using prediction markets to govern a country. Surprisingly, this paper was published in the journal Cryonics.

When I first read it, I thought the concept was interesting but impractical—zero feasibility. But upon re-reading recently, I realized that if the scenario isn’t limited to national governance, it could actually be a versatile, operational framework.

If you don’t remember who Merkle is, he’s one of the co-inventors of “asymmetric encryption” (public-private key cryptography) and the inventor of the “Merkle Tree.”

Every on-chain transaction depends on public-private keys. And each Bitcoin block is stamped with a Merkle root—used for efficiently proving that all transactions within the block are complete and unaltered.

Background on the Paper

Merkle was quite blunt: he believed that “one person, one vote” democracy is fundamentally flawed. This system forces most ordinary people—who often lack understanding of economics, political science, or sociology and are misled by media—to vote on extremely complex legislation.

This isn’t fair and inevitably leads to mediocre or poor decisions. The paper describes a governance machine (Merkle calls it DAO Democracy) that operates completely differently from traditional voting systems.

Traditional voting is “decide first, see results later” (vote for A, then bear the consequences). Merkle’s machine is “predict first, decide later.” Its operation relies on two core components:

1. The sole goal: Citizens’ “Happiness Index”

The system has a single, unchangeable ultimate goal (protected by DAO contracts), called the “Happiness Index.”

This index is determined by citizens’ post-facto ratings. Every year, all citizens rate the past year on a scale from 0 (worst) to 1 (best). The average of all scores becomes that year’s “Annual Happiness Index.”

This score is the system’s only metric of success.

2. The decision engine: Prediction Markets

With a single goal, decision-making becomes straightforward. When someone proposes a new law (e.g., “Should we build a new high-speed rail?”), instead of voting, the system opens two parallel prediction markets:

  • Market A: Predicts, “If the law passes, what will the long-term Happiness Index be?”
  • Market B: Predicts, “If nothing is done, what will the long-term Happiness Index be?”

The system then waits for the prediction period to end and compares the prices of A and B.

If Market A’s price exceeds Market B’s (say, 0.72), the system automatically approves the law. Otherwise, it vetoes it.

The Cleverness of the Design

This design is brilliant because it shifts decision-making from a biased, populist “political problem” to a rational, information-driven “prediction problem.”

In prediction markets, reckless bets (“I don’t care, I just hate high-speed rails!”) will lose money. Those who profit are the ones who most accurately predict whether the law will make the majority happier in the future.

It cleverly leverages “greed” to let rational voices, rather than the loudest, dominate decisions. Of course, the actual mechanism is more complex than I described—interested readers can check out the paper themselves.

Bringing It Back to Reality

Personally, I think using this system to govern a country is practically impossible.

Merkle himself acknowledged many challenges: how to prevent the system from pursuing high scores at absurd costs—like “giving everyone hallucinogens”—or how to handle laws with a 10% chance of causing apocalyptic outcomes.

Beyond technical hurdles, political friction makes it unlikely any existing regime would adopt such a scheme.

But if we look at narrower domains, with appropriate abstractions and carefully crafted conditions, I believe there could be feasible pathways.

A Simple Example

Community homeowners’ association decision-making: “Face-saving” members want to spend 100,000 yuan to build an unnecessary fountain. “Practical” members want to use that money to fix a leaking roof.

In traditional voting, this ends up being decided by “who has the loudest voice,” not “who’s right.”

Applying the “Merkle Machine” concept:

  • Goal: Annual resident satisfaction.
  • Proposals: Two options, with prediction markets to set their prices:

Market A: Predicts, “If we build the fountain, what will the satisfaction score be at year’s end?”
Market B: Predicts, “If we repair the roof, what will the satisfaction score be?”

Residents whose homes are leaking (the real experts) only have one vote in traditional voting. But in this system, they can confidently bet on Market B, knowing fixing the roof will improve satisfaction. If Market B’s predicted satisfaction is higher than Market A’s, the system automatically approves fixing the roof.

At year’s end, residents rate their satisfaction. Those whose homes are no longer leaking give high scores. The people who bet on fixing the roof win the bets, earning the money from those who bet on the fountain.

The actual implementation would be more complex, but the core idea is the same.

Essentially, this approach turns subjective, community-wide decisions—often fraught with bias—over to a transparent, market-driven prediction system. Democracy’s “one person, one vote” isn’t eliminated but transformed into a different form, enabling the entire mechanism to operate smoothly.

This concept could even evolve into a “governance-as-a-service” platform. The platform itself doesn’t set KPIs or policies; it provides neutral tools—like DAO contracts, prediction markets, and oracles.

Any organization, from homeowners’ associations to open-source communities, could register, input their specific KPIs (like “satisfaction” or “downloads”), and propose initiatives.

The platform’s role is to run the markets and deliver the optimal decision. It acts as a neutral referee, offering a plug-and-play decision-making machine for organizations facing tough, transparent choices.

View Original
Disclaimer: The information on this page may come from third parties and does not represent the views or opinions of Gate. The content displayed on this page is for reference only and does not constitute any financial, investment, or legal advice. Gate does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information and shall not be liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Virtual asset investments carry high risks and are subject to significant price volatility. You may lose all of your invested principal. Please fully understand the relevant risks and make prudent decisions based on your own financial situation and risk tolerance. For details, please refer to Disclaimer.

Related Articles

Ark Invest Warns Quantum Computing Could Threaten Bitcoin

The essay discusses the vulnerability of Bitcoin’s security model to quantum computing threats and the potential exploitation of private keys. It highlights the industry's research into Post-Quantum Cryptography, including proposals like BIP-360, aimed at enhancing Bitcoin's resilience against future attacks, while emphasizing the importance of careful implementation and community consensus.

Coinfomania1m ago

Bitcoin MVRV Z-Score Drops Below 1 Again

The MVRV Z-Score is a key on-chain indicator for assessing Bitcoin's value by comparing market and realized capitalizations. Historical data shows that when the score drops below 1, it often signals significant market recovery. However, changing market dynamics and institutional influences may alter future patterns.

Coinfomania1m ago

Bitcoin Consolidation Continues After $74K Rejection

Bitcoin traded at $70,795 on March 14, 2026, with a market capitalization of $1.41 trillion and 24-hour trading volume of $49.48 billion. The cryptocurrency moved within an intraday range between $70,416 and $73,838 while technical indicators across major timeframes reflected a neutral market

Coinpedia20m ago

Hashrate Index:油价上涨对比特币挖矿成本直接影响较小

Gate News 消息,3 月 14 日,据 Hashrate Index 分析,油价上涨对比特币挖矿成本的直接影响较小。主要原因在于,比特币网络的大部分算力运行依赖的能源与原油价格基本无关。数据显示,全球仅约 6-10% 的算力分布在海湾国家(主要产油国)等对石油价格敏感的电力市场。

GateNews27m ago

「刻舟求劍」式幣價預測走紅,玄學預言的實戰邏輯與缺陷

作者:Frank,PANews 每當市場進入不上不下的迷惘階段,就會有人試圖用「刻舟求劍」式的歷史回溯方法去預測下一段走勢。在這種情況下,人們往往能從這些理論和圖表中看到歷史總是在重演,並似乎自動將未來一段時間的行情走勢與過去的某一段進行重疊驗證。 這種重合似乎有著神奇的效果,也常常被驗證。有部落客自稱這種預測的準確率能到達 75%~80% 。 這種在社群媒體上屢屢爆紅的「刻舟求劍」式價格預測,究竟是在幫助市場識別階段,還是在把噪音包裝成預言? 從「滴答分形」到「歷史押韻」 關於 2025 年 10 月市場頂點預測的巔峰操作是名為 CryptoBullet 的分析師,他所創建的一種名為「ti

区块客1h ago
Comment
0/400
No comments