Prior to the proposal passing, Cardano’s Technical Steering Committee submitted a competing bid and users expressed concern about transparency and accountability.
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Cardano’s core development team received approval to be paid 96 million ADA from the treasury to forge ahead with proposed upgrades to the network.
Input Output Global (IOG) — — submitted the proposal for the equivalent of $71 million in Cardano (), which with 74% in favor, representing 200 votes, with six against and seven abstaining, according to the governance action.
The 12-month development plan focuses on improving scalability, the developer experience and interoperability.
Still, it drew some concern from the community over costs, overall accountability and transparency.
Upgrade includes faster transactions, better onboarding
Funding will be milestone-based, with Cardano member-based organization Intersect acting as an independent administrator.
Payments will be released as upgrades are delivered, with other oversight via smart contracts and a dedicated committee, to IOG.
IOG must publish monthly updates, engineering timesheets and quarterly budget breakdowns.
Some of the key projects in the IOG proposal include Hydra, a protocol for fast, , and Project Acropolis, a modular re-architecture of the Cardano node for greater flexibility and easier onboarding of new core developers.
Cardano’s average transaction cost is currently 0.34 ADA, to blockchain research firm Messari, with an average of 20 seconds per block.
In addition, IOG is looking to lower RAM usage and reduce operational costs for stake pool operators through performance optimizations and to implement technical foundations for more advanced smart contracts and seamless interoperability.
Cardano community voices concerns about costs, transparency
Tim Harrison, the vice president of community and ecosystem at IOG, said in a statement on Saturday that this was the first time the community had directly authorized core development funding for Cardano.
Prior to the vote, some community members concerns about the funding cost, transparency on how the funds would be spent and accountability for delivering what was promised.
Some also whether the proposal should be broken down into smaller goals with separate budgets requiring individual votes on each item.
Related:
There was a competing proposal from Cardano’s Technical Steering Committee (TSC), which was ultimately not endorsed by Intersect.
Adam Rusch, a member of Intersect’s board of directors, in an April 28 post to X that the community should decide which proposal to support.
Other blockchains are also upgrading
Cardano isn’t the only blockchain working on upgrades this year.
The Solana network , raising the limit to 60 million compute units (CU) with plans for further expansion before the end of the year.
was increased to just under 44.92 million on July 22, to Ycharts. A higher gas limit allows Ethereum to process more transactions per block.
Also, , increasing the number of data blobs per block and the validator staking limit, among other upgrades. The next upgrade, Fusaka, is .
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