The DHF

avatar

dhf.png

So The Man Cave has suffered with the entire bear market of people complaining about the DHF, and if it's getting complained about in my room, I expect it's being complained about elsewhere, and if they can't elsewhere then it's certainly being complained about in private amongst each other.

It wouldn't feel right for me if I didn't say something and represent the community I have, because a lot of what's being said also mirrors my sentiments too.

Here's why:

Before I continue I'll tell you a little story about me.

Before I worked full time on hive, and before I was some big read blogger I used to work as a Project Manager in a Charity. Yeah, it wasn't a big charity, it was more so a medium sized one that only covered a part of the region I lived in. So basically I covered a piece of land that was about as big as a city, perhaps, I'm not too sure. Anyway..

Part of my job there was to make funding bids to people giving away money. It could be for anything. If I thought I had the skills to do what they were asking for then I'd write up a bid and ask for some hard cash.

It's like say there was money available for homeless people in Yarmouth, I'd put in a bid that represents my skills where I can offer access to free Ipads so homeless people can access (and be guided to) support they wouldn't necessarily get offline.

An example, so I'd ask for say [x] amount of Ipads, maybe a coffee and food allowance for the room so we could feed the homeless too, and my wage so I could co-ordinate it all - doesn't happen without me, I'm the key element in this scenario.

Anyway, I secured us Millions in money and I managed to keep myself employed for 5 years before all the funding dried up.

What did I have to do for it? Well, jump through hoops. I basically had to record everything -- and because my area was Mental Health I had to make up interesting ways to record progress and development of people that accessed our services. I had to record everything, right down to when I had to piss. Well, maybe not that far,

But you get the idea.

If the funders weren't happy? They'd pull out their funding quicker than you could say my funding's gone. I had to meet with them bi-monthly to give them progress reports and show them I was doing what I said I was doing. I never had any funding pulled, but I fell behind on some targets once and had to give them an action plan on how I was going to get back on track.

You must see where I'm going with this right?

The main issue most people that come into the cave and talk about is that there are no checks, people get their money and if it turns out great, but if it doesn't, then "ah well, better luck next time"

Now this isn't a slant at the way we run things here because I still love hive, but I know I for one would definitely like to see some sort of better revised proposal system where we can actually see what's happening, some recording, some progress reports, where the money is going, what their achievement record looks like.

I mean it's all very well and good saying we are building, but the reality of the matter is that people are starting to get really disenfranchised with how much we are spending with not a lot to show for it.

I mean I absolutely have no doubt that most of the proposals that are winning right now are going to those that are doing good by their metrics, but it would be nice to see those metrics. What are they being spent on? What are you achieving? What's happening?

I personally think that implementing a system of recording would not only benefit us (the hive user) but also give people a birds eye view of what is going on in the development of hive right now -- so that perhaps it's not all as doom and gloom as people think. Or at least the underlaying thought of hive anyway. Because I'm getting that a lot right now. People are beginning to talk openly about it and not in closed doors anymore.

Call me naive all you like, I believe most things are above board, but I think a point of healing general consensus amongst hive users would be opening up recording to people we are funding. It would do us a lot of good. Not only the people of hive, but the people we fund too.

Like I said, I fell behind once on my originally stated targets and I had to work up an action plan to get back on track. It kept me on my toes.

Anyway, those are my thoughts for today. Do with my thoughts as you like! Hah.

Peace :)



0
0
0.000
10 comments
avatar

As someone working with mental health and completing 3-4 times the same info in 3-4 different forms, I do not like it, but I agree that proper recording is needed sometimes.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Accountability. A very important word I believe. How is the Hive blockchain doing with ensuring its investors that is in place?

0
0
0.000
avatar

This is exactly it. What I'm thinking. Accountability is good for everyone involved.

0
0
0.000
avatar

the dhf the way it is, is a joke. the idea is not bad, but to simply give money just because or because you have a friend or even a partner in crime with a huge HP is nonsense. Instead as i have seen in the comments, in the post and i have said in the past as well, accountability and a clear plan should exist. Also, the goal should be to increase the value of Hive somehow and to make the project generate income after a certain period of time in order to be self-sustainable and give the spot to another project. None of these truly takes place :P

0
0
0.000
avatar

I agree. Sustainability is big where I come from. I made all my projects sustainable in the end. So sustainable that I wasn't needed in the end! Haha. A sad reality, but something I'm proud of.

All my projects existed until the charity finally closed its doors 5 years later due to lack of funding.

0
0
0.000
avatar

I agree, there should be some accountability. It's great to give people a chance to realise their ideas, but if they're not delivering, and they don't show any progress there should be a safeguard in place to potentially cut funding.

Also, each project giving back to help other projects get off the ground would be good. Kind of like Dragons Den, they front the cost, but in return expect a percentage. There's nothing wrong with that logic.

0
0
0.000
avatar

It's pretty rare you find a program like this where there isn't at least some kind of follow up required. Documentation is key and I too have seen funds pulled back due to lack of transparency. I don't think it's unreasonable to implement something like this here on Hive.

0
0
0.000