The history of DAOs is barely a decade long, but it already has the arc of a much older story: a bold idea, a spectacular early disaster, a humbled rebuilding, a mania, and a slow maturation into institutions that manage billions — while still wrestling with the problem they were invented to solve, the concentration of power. This page traces the DAO form from its origins to the present.
Precursors and the idea (2013–2015)
The concept predates the first working example. Around 2013, Dan Larimer described "decentralized autonomous corporations" (DACs) in the context of BitShares, and in May 2014 Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin published "DAOs, DACs, DAs and More: An Incomplete Terminology Guide", defining a DAO as an entity with "internal capital" whose behavior is governed by code, with humans "at the edges." Ethereum's launch in July 2015 provided the general-purpose smart-contract platform the idea needed.
The DAO and the fork (2016)
In April 2016 a team from Slock.it launched The DAO, an investor-directed venture fund living entirely in an Ethereum contract. Its token sale raised roughly $150 million in ether from more than ten thousand participants — at the time the largest crowdfunding in history, holding around 14% of all ETH then in circulation.
On 17 June 2016 an attacker exploited a reentrancy bug in its split function and drained about 3.6 million ETH — then worth roughly $50–60 million — into a child DAO. After weeks of crisis debate, the Ethereum community hard-forked the chain on 20 July 2016 to return the funds, and the minority that rejected the fork on "code is law" grounds kept the original chain alive as Ethereum Classic. The episode killed The DAO, prompted the SEC's 2017 report treating its tokens as securities, and set the terms of every later debate about on-chain governance: code executes exactly as written, including its bugs. (Gemini Cryptopedia)
The quiet rebuilding (2017–2020)
For two years "DAO" was a scare word, but the machinery kept improving. Aragon (2017) turned DAO deployment into a framework; MakerDAO — today Sky — proved a token-governed protocol could manage a live financial system. In February 2019 MolochDAO restarted the movement with the opposite philosophy to The DAO: a minimum viable grants DAO of a few hundred lines, whose signature ragequit mechanism let any member exit with their pro-rata share of the treasury rather than be bound by a majority — the design ancestor of every exit right since.
Then DeFi gave DAOs their real economy. In June 2020 Compound began distributing its COMP governance token to users, igniting "yield farming"; in September 2020 Uniswap airdropped UNI and handed the protocol to a token-holder DAO. Compound's Governor and Timelock contracts became the industry's standard governance stack, and gasless off-chain voting on Snapshot (2020) plus Safe multisig treasuries completed the modern DAO toolkit.
Mania and mainstream attention (2021)
2021 made DAOs a cultural phenomenon. The emblem was ConstitutionDAO, which raised about $47 million from roughly 17,000 people in under a week to bid on a first-edition copy of the U.S. Constitution — lost the Sotheby's auction by a hair, refunded its donors, and dissolved. It proved a DAO could form around a single goal at astonishing speed, and its post-auction refund chaos previewed the operational problems (gas costs, coordination, treasury management) the industry would spend years fixing.
Legal recognition (2021–present)
Law began catching up. Wyoming's DAO LLC law (effective July 2021) was the first U.S. statute to give DAOs limited liability as LLCs; the Marshall Islands DAO Act (2022) created a dedicated offshore wrapper; and Wyoming followed with the member-managed DUNA (Decentralized Unincorporated Nonprofit Association) in 2024, designed for genuinely decentralized memberships. Regulators are now engaging directly with the form — in June 2026 Malta's financial regulator opened a formal consultation on DeFi and DAO governance under MiCA. Without a wrapper, courts have tended to treat DAO members as general partners with unlimited personal liability — the risk driving this whole workstream (see DAO legal structures).
Maturity and its discontents (2022–2026)
The current era is defined by scale and by governance stress-tests. DAO treasuries collectively passed $25 billion by early 2026, while the same tracking shows fewer than 1% of token holders controlling ~90% of voting power and typical turnout of 5–15%. The Beanstalk attack (April 2022) used a flash loan to seize a governance majority and drain $182 million in a single transaction, making governance itself an attack surface. Longer-lived experiments wound down honestly — the Aragon Association dissolved in 2024 and returned its treasury to ANT holders (see Aragon), and in March 2026 Tally — the hosted interface behind binding on-chain votes for over 500 DAOs — shut down its hosted product, its CEO arguing that easing regulatory pressure had made DAO governance optional, before the platform continued as Cactus under ScopeLift in a wider governance-tooling retrenchment. Meanwhile in 2026 the ENS DAO delivered the era's defining spectacle, its founder deploying roughly half of active voting power to block a Security Council renewal, while researchers documented why DAO power keeps re-centralizing. The frontier work — alternative voting models, treasury redemption votes like GnosisDAO's 2026 GIP-151 (see rage-quit and exit rights), AI-assisted governance — is all, one way or another, a response to the concentration problem the 2016 crash first exposed.
How Caper approaches this
Read as one story, DAO history keeps failing at the same two points: power concentrates, and dissenting members have no clean way out. A caper is built around the second lesson especially — like Moloch's ragequit, every member holds a standing exit right to a pro-rata share of the treasury, and voting weight grows with demonstrated participation rather than stake alone, so the ENS-style single-whale takeover is structurally harder. The linked Caper pages state those mechanics neutrally.
References
- Vitalik Buterin, DAOs, DACs, DAs and More: An Incomplete Terminology Guide (2014).
- Wikipedia, The DAO — raise, hack, and hard fork.
- CoinDesk, How The DAO Hack Changed Ethereum and Crypto.
- Gemini Cryptopedia, The DAO hack.
- MolochDAO, MolochVentures/moloch — the minimum-viable-DAO revival.
- Wikipedia, ConstitutionDAO.
- a16z crypto, DAO governance attacks, and how to avoid them — Beanstalk.
- CoinLaw, DAO statistics 2026 — treasuries, concentration, turnout.