Yes, PoV (proof-of-value, Proof of Value) can provide rewards to developers of dApp/dAIpps, open-source softwares such as AIs and games, EIPs, technical standards in various industries, research papers, and more!

The innovative software Enki, which supports the impact of PoV, can also help you create and manage your new type of anonymous community!

Below is a diagram of Governance Consensus Proof (version 1.0):

The reason for applying PoV to EIP (Ethereum Improvement Proposal):

  • From a governance perspective, Ethereum has merely skillfully borrowed the outer shells of Bitcoin's PoW and Peercoin's PoS, lacking the public governance fund that both consensus mechanisms possess. This has led to unfair treatment for the developers of EIPs, which is inherited the decentralized collaboration model from Bitcoin Improvement Proposals (BIPs) : although they have achieved significant results over the past nine years, there has yet to be a public fund that rewards their contributors! Compared to miners (validators) who can earn rewards from each block, this is clearly unfair from a governance perspective. 
  • Although PoV will reconstruct a massive Satoshi UTO fund, for EIPs, Version 1.0 of PoV cannot implement an automated quantitative reward mechanism based on decentralized value assessment. We still need to rely on investors' investment behavior to achieve decentralized value evaluation and provide bonuses to developers through trading fees.

If you are about to submit a new EIP, please wait a moment. You should read  Mint a Smart Common and follow the suggestions below: 

  • If your EIP is part of a dApp/dAIpp you are developing, then you likely do not need to use that EIP to mint a smart common. Complete your dApp/dAIpp and deploy it to the Ethereum mainnet; use the dApp/dAIpp to mint a smart common. That's it.
  • If your EIP is an innovation of a purely technical method like EIP-7702 or an improvement to the Ethereum underlying protocol like EIP-158, the former is just a generic method with the developer's purpose not being to develop a specific dApp/dAIpp, and the latter is completely unrelated to dApp/dAIpps (only ERC-type EIPs are directly related to dApp/dAIpps). Then, you can use DAism to mint a smart common with the contents of your EIP (save it in the description of your smart common, which is tantamount to registration). When minting, you can enter the wallet addresses of all partners and their dividend rights. In addition, the naming rule for valuation tokens during minting is most probably: abbreviation-of-your-smart-common.eips.

If you have already submitted an EIP, you can also act according to the following suggestions:

  • Mint a smart common with the content of your EIP (in the description) or just with the URL of the content (not recommended), and then add a line of information after the Authors of the EIP already published on ethereum.org. The format is "Owner your wallet address." Note that the wallet address corresponding to Owner must be consistent with the wallet address used when you mint the smart common to allow others to confirm that a smart common on DAism indeed corresponds to a particular EIP existed.

You may have realized: in the future, all EIPs can be directly published on-chain through DAism (in the description of your smart common)!

Please pay attention to the order of operations in my suggestion! Because this method is not absolutely reliable. For example, if your EIP hosting site GitHub or Ethereum.org is hacked, or if one of its site administrator commits internal theft, in short, if someone writes his wallet address in your EIP document, and then he mints a smart common on DAism (if he can get ahead of you, it would be even worse), and the dividend address is set to his wallet, he can exploit your results to deceive and gain rewards! Therefore, the faster you act, the better!

OK, for all technical standard developers and scientific paper authors, the good news is that by adopting the method introduced earlier, DAism's PoV can also provide you with a reward mechanism!

So how can smart commons that can be rewarded through PoV be categorized?

Please read the last part of Mint a Smart Common.