Slock.it DAO token IOUs to go on sale Thursday, according to William Piquard, business developer at Gatecoin Limited, a Hong Kong based regulated financial institution for blockchain assets.
The much anticipated DAO, which aims to fund the creation of smart locks as well as an Ethereum computer with more than 4,000 members flocking to their Slack channel, has not itself yet been released.
On Wednesday 27 April, Piquard stated :
“[T]he Decentralized Autonomous Organization may not be created tomorrow, but Gatecoin users will be able to buy DAO token IOUs from tomorrow to the DAO creation date. Once the DAO is created, those IOUs will be automatically converted into actual DAO tokens.”
The IOUs will be sold at a rate of one Ether for 100 IOU tokens, according to AurĂ©lien Menant, founder and CEO of Gatecoin, and won’t be tradable until the end of the actual DAO’s creation process. Menant further stated in reply to a number of our questions that “each IOU will be collateralised in ETH and those ETH will be sent to the DAO at launch.” The actual DAO tokens are also set at one Ether per 100 Slock.it DAO tokens for the first 14 days, according to
DaoHub, gradually rising thereafter, ending with a conversion rate of 100 DAO tokens for 1.5 ether for the last 4 days during a period of 28 days.
In more general public statements on Slock.it’s slack channel, Menant stated that Gatecoin “won’t take any fee on the DAOETH pair” and that Gatecoin’s goal was “to raise [as much] money [as] possible for the DAO and have those people trading on our platform.”
The move has been seen as controversial, especially as apparently it was misreported earlier today that the Slock.it DAO tokens themselves will go on sale tomorrow. Stephan Tual, the founder of
slock.it, emphasizing “the DAO is decentralized and we do not control it. We are just building a framework anyone can use” stated in reply to our questions that:
“[D]aohub.org (the largest community and the most likely to have a working DAO that follows our Standard DAO model to the letter), as far as we can tell, [has] not instantiated the DAO nor has it set a date for the instantiation of the DAO” before adding that “[t]he DAO will instantiate when it damn pleases, not when an Exchange decides it will. Welcome to true decentralization, middlemen not welcome.”