CorebroCore Whitepaper
  • Introduction
  • Getting Started
    • What is AI?
    • Vision & Mission
  • Basics
    • CerebroCore AI Architecture
    • Use Cases
    • AI Agents
    • $CCAI Token Utility
    • Tokenomics
    • Security & Transparency
    • Governance & Community
Powered by GitBook
On this page
  • 🧠 1. DAO Governance Framework
  • πŸ› οΈ 2. Proposal Lifecycle
  • 🧱 3. Governance Participation Tools
  • πŸŽ“ 4. Community Contribution Mechanisms
  • πŸ’¬ 5. Community Channels
  • 🌍 6. Decentralized Expansion
  1. Basics

Governance & Community

PreviousSecurity & Transparency

Last updated 5 days ago

In line with its mission to decentralize access to artificial intelligence, CerebroCore AI is governed by its community. Platform evolution, funding decisions, and the roadmap are shaped collectively through a Decentralized Autonomous Organization (DAO) powered by the $CCAI token.

We believe AI systems must not only serve the people, but also be shaped by the people. CerebroCore empowers its users to become stakeholders β€” not just consumers.


🧠 1. DAO Governance Framework

CerebroCore's governance is implemented via an on-chain proposal and voting system, where token holders actively participate in major decisions. The DAO governs:

  • βœ… Launch of new AI agents

  • βœ… Allocation of development grants or ecosystem funding

  • βœ… Platform parameter adjustments (fees, limits, tiers)

  • βœ… Treasury usage and liquidity incentives

  • βœ… Security upgrades and audits

  • βœ… Strategic integrations and partnerships


πŸ› οΈ 2. Proposal Lifecycle

Every governance action follows a transparent 4-phase cycle:

  1. Proposal Submission Any $CCAI holder can submit a governance proposal by staking a minimum amount of tokens as signal collateral.

  2. Community Review Proposals enter a discussion forum (off-chain or in Discord) for feedback, refinement, and alignment.

  3. Voting Period The proposal enters a timed on-chain voting stage. Token-weighted votes determine the outcome.

  4. Execution If passed, the proposal is executed either via automated smart contract or multisig treasury control.

Quorum and voting thresholds are configurable and can evolve through meta-governance.


🧱 3. Governance Participation Tools

CerebroCore provides accessible interfaces for all users to engage with the DAO:

  • Web-based Governance Dashboard

  • Wallet-based voting (MetaMask, WalletConnect)

  • Real-time vote tracking and delegation

  • GitHub & Forum integration for proposal specs

Staking $CCAI is not just a passive act β€” it’s a ticket to active co-ownership of the platform’s future.


πŸŽ“ 4. Community Contribution Mechanisms

Beyond governance, the CerebroCore ecosystem encourages community collaboration and contribution through:

  • 🧩 Prompt Engineers: Submit reusable prompts or use-case flows

  • πŸ§ͺ Beta Testers: Help test upcoming agents before public release

  • 🎨 Agent Creators: Design and publish agents in the upcoming Agent Marketplace

  • 🧰 Developers: Build plugins, APIs, or SDK wrappers for CerebroCore

  • πŸ“£ Community Ambassadors: Host events, create content, onboard new users

Contributors can earn $CCAI through grants, bounties, or retroactive reward rounds.


πŸ’¬ 5. Community Channels

We believe that transparency starts with open communication. Our community thrives on:

  • Telegram & Discord: Day-to-day collaboration and support

  • X (Twitter): Announcements, updates, and insights

  • Forum (Governance Hub): Long-form proposal discussions and ideas

  • Mirror / Medium: Deep dives, postmortems, and progress reports

Future plans include hosting on-chain Town Halls, dev calls, and proposal Q&A sessions.


🌍 6. Decentralized Expansion

The CerebroCore community isn’t just a group of users β€” it’s a network of co-creators. As the platform grows, the DAO will oversee:

  • Regional community growth (via subDAO or ambassador clusters)

  • Localized agent development (e.g., Bahasa Indonesia, Spanish tutor)

  • Grants for nonprofit or open education use cases

  • Open voting on which industries CerebroCore agents should expand into