Recently reviewing governance proposals, the more I look at it, the more I feel that "delegated voting" is a bit like lending out a microphone—once you lend it out, you might never get it back. People say it increases participation, but in reality, votes end up concentrated in the hands of a few familiar faces. How parameters are adjusted, where the risk boundaries are drawn—all depend on their preferences and personal relationships... To put it plainly, governance tokens might not be governing the protocol itself, but rather the patience of the token holders.



Some also keep an eye on large on-chain transfers and unusual activity in exchange hot and cold wallets, treating it as signals from "smart money." I also get curious and check it out, but the idea that transfers = intent often breaks down. Instead, the inertia of "default delegation" in governance is more genuine and more impactful.

What I’ve learned isn’t techniques, but that: don’t be fooled by superficial participation to lull yourself to sleep; the flow of power is the real protagonist in the details.
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