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Will Papper
@will
@bountybot 50 USDC for examples of smart contract-based donation models using token yield. See thread for discussion context The yield must be donated via a smart contract. Crypto donations that do not use a smart contract (e.g. direct donations to specific addresses) will NOT qualify. Likewise, crypto donations via a smart contract that use the principal and not the yield will NOT qualify. Yield must be donated. stETH and stablecoin examples preferred. EVM-based examples preferred. 10 USDC each to the five most relevant examples. If there are fewer than five relevant examples, the 50 USDC will be split evenly among them. Duplicate answers will not be relevant and will be first come, first served.
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Myk.eth
@myk
A project that I made is maybe in a grey area of qualifying How it works: 1. Token projects that have a fee-on-transfer mark my dex as fee-exempt 2. Token project launches a new tax structure on my dex (at a lower rate than uniswap to incentivize users) 3. Users are shown their savings and are encouraged to donate a portion of their savings (donate to charity with the money you just saved) 4. Token projects take their smaller fee in ETH, not their token to reduce sells on their charts Everybody wins: - Projects dont sell as much of their token - Users get cheaper fees - Charities get donations site: pawswap.exchange base: https://basescan.org/address/0x768f16B7f4bb06A6fe0f720b551c1D63c0253133 eth: https://etherscan.io/address/0x7df9DfD9168aE53DC5141110A0b476A053F70eD1 I understand if it doesnt qualify but figured I'd send it out there!
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Will Papper
@will
Very cool! This is super fascinating Since it's donations via a smart contract using assets other than the principal, it qualifies! It's not a traditional conception of yield (and may not be usable for Nouns), but definitely one that meets the spirit of this goal
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