DarkFi DAO — untraceable?
Amir Taaki, one of the most renowned Bitcoin developers and a key figure of the cypherpunk movement, has introduced the world’s first fully anonymous DAO. He built it together with the DarkFi team (a group developing privacy-focused tools for online communities)
The idea is simple but radical: every DAO action should look like random data that can’t be linked to any organization. In such a system, everything is hidden — payments and their amounts, token holders, proposal initiators, vote counts, even treasury data. On-chain it looks like chaos, but within the DAO, the usual governance logic continues to function ��
According to Taaki, this isn’t just a technical feature but a return to the roots. He believes modern DAOs have lost their original meaning: governance concentrates in the hands of big holders, while processes become overly public and vulnerable to pressure. An anonymous DAO, he argues, breaks this pattern, allowing communities to operate freely and without external control, especially under repressive regimes
The crypto community’s reaction was mixed. Some saw it as a continuation of classic cypherpunk philosophy and a step toward a new level of DAO evolution. Others were skeptical, saying full anonymity makes the project impractical and risky. Yet everyone agreed on one thing: if the idea survives and evolves, it could redefine what decentralized organizations truly mean
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