Newsletter Roundup (tl;dr):
ENS Labs Update: ENS Anniversary, Box Domains Integration, USPTO Petition,
Community Updates: Privacy-preserving names on Base
Meta-Governance: Active Voting Period, Q1 Review
Ecosystem: Updates, ENSIP forum, Project Highlights
Public Goods: Small Grants Results, Large Grants presentations
Welcome to the ENS DAO Newsletter:
New editions — published bi-weekly (Tuesday)
Previous editions are archived on the ENS DAO Archive.
New proposals are broadcasted to Telegram.
ENS DAO Dashboard is now available for public review.
Submit feedback — tell us what to feature!
—
Refer to ENS DAO Calendar for ENS DAO working group calls and other events.
Calendar: Public Access / Access with Gmail
—
The Term 5 Dashboard, managed by the Meta-Governance Working Group, provides updated summaries of DAO governance and initiatives. Regularly check it for the latest developments.
Proposal | Type | Discussion | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
Upgrade DNSSEC support | Executable | ||
Commence Streams for Service Providers | Executable | ||
Determine ENS Labs’ next steps in eth.link litigation | Social | ||
Funding Request: Meta-Governance Working Group (1H) | Social | ||
Funding Request: Public Goods Working Group (1H) | Social | ||
Funding Transfer: Public Goods Working Group (1H) | Executable | ||
Enable Self-Funding for the Endowment | Executable | ||
Security Council | Social | ||
ENS Steward Vesting Proposal | Social | ||
Roles Modifier V2 Migration | Executable | Pending |
Note: A minimum of 100k $ENS is required to submit executable proposals. Once a proposal gains momentum, the stewards will prioritize it for a vote during the designated voting window. See our Governance Docs for more information. To view the real-time distribution of voting power among delegates, visit votingpower.xyz.
—
@AvsA outlined a Governance Distribution Program in an effort to increase the $ENS voting supply. It details a strategy for distributing ENS tokens to DAO members — review the temp-check here. — 03.19.24
—
In April 2024, the ENS Protocol registered 48k new .eth domains, bringing the total to 2.1 million. The protocol generated revenue of $1.4 million during this period, all of which was allocated to the ENS DAO. The number of Ethereum account holders with at least one ENS name increased by 44.5k, totaling 877k. There were 42.3k primary ENS names set, making the overall count 833k. Additionally, 9.3k new avatar records were created, reaching a cumulative total of 169k. — 1
—
ENS announced several significant improvements aimed at enhancing the functionality and user experience of their platform. These updates include everything from a redesigned website to advanced security measures, reflecting ENS’s commitment to providing robust and user-friendly web3 infrastructure.
Here’s a summary of the key highlights from the update:
New Documentation Site: A revamped documentation site with added event videos.
Gasless DNSSEC Support: Enhanced support for importing DNS names without gas fees, with a streamlined offchain process.
Website Redesign: Updates to the ENS domain website, improving visual elements like fonts and icons.
Search Function Improvements: Case-insensitive search capabilities and removal of risky autocomplete features.
Testing Infrastructure: Transition from Cypress to Playwright for better efficiency in end-to-end testing.
Web3 Starter Kit: Introduction of a Web3 starter kit using Next.js for easier project setups.
Security and Quality of Life Enhancements: Multiple updates to improve user experience and security across the platform.
For more information, you can view the full update here. — 04.17.24
—
Box Domains and ENS have announced a partnership, integrating .box domains into the ENS ecosystem. Box Domains is the first Top-Level Domain registrar to be integrated alongside .eth on the ENS Manager App. This collaboration allows users to explore and register .box names through the ENS Manager App, alongside .eth names. The integration represents a step towards blending Web2 familiarity with Web3 innovation, offering users the ability to tokenize Web2 domains and fully own their .box names as NFTs, which are ready for website and email use. Read more details about the partnership on the ENS Blog. — 04.23.24
—
ENS has informed its stance on a patent obtained by Unstoppable Domains (UD) for technology originally developed as open-source by ENS Labs. ENS has petitioned the USPTO to challenge the validity of the patent, as it believes UD’s patent grab contradicts its ethos and disrupts the foundations of Web3 and the open internet. ENS highlights that UD has applied for several other patents for basic technologies, threatening decentralization and public benefit. ENS is committed to ensuring that essential web functions remain free and unrestricted, and it is transparent in its efforts to defend a vision of the internet that is open and innovative for everyone. — 05.02.24
—
Luc.eth, developer relations at ENS Labs, has announced a series of updates to ccip.tools. The updates aim to enhance user experience and functionality on the platform. Users can explore the new features, including Holesky support, improved transaction history, updated URLs on previously deployed Resolvers, and an upgraded Wagmi feature. Visit ccip.tools to learn more and experience these updates firsthand. — 05.02.24
—
ENS is celebrating its 7th anniversary on May 4th, 2024, and to commemorate this milestone, it has released a special NFT on Zora via Base. This unique NFT, available for minting at 0.0007 ETH, serves as a piece of the future, aligning with the theme, “May the address be with you!” to celebrate ENS’s seventh year. Over 29k NFTs have been minted at the time of this writing. Have a look at the NFT here. — 05.03.24
—
EthCC has announced Makoto Inoue from ENS Labs as one of its speakers for the event, which will be held in Brussels from July 8-11, 2024. Makoto will be speaking on the track focused on Rollups and Scaling Solutions. — 05.03.24
—
—
Participate in improving the ENS Ecosystem! Provide feedback on Canny, where members of ENS Labs and Working Group stewards will work to address your submissions. The ENS community can submit feedback in three main categories: Feature Requests, Integrations, and Bug Reports. You can also participate by upvoting or commenting on existing submissions. We’re listening to the community, send your feedback on Canny now.
—
Share updates on projects developing ENS for consideration for inclusion in the newsletter. Submit contributions and describe at least one nifty feature about your project for potential inclusion in the newsletter. Send your contributions here.
—
Kiwi News is a decentralized news platform, akin to Hacker News, focusing on crypto tech, products, and culture. The platform has 2,000 monthly readers and 120 curators, with user profiles built on top of ENS. The news feed can be accessed at news.kiwistand.com, while individual profiles, such as news.kiwistand.com/macbudkowski.eth, provide insights into specific users. — 04.23.24
—
Uniswap integrated ENS subnames with the uni.eth name, and in just two months, over 500,000 usernames have been claimed. This highlights the rapid adoption of this decentralized identity feature.eb3 identities using the Uniswap domain. — 04.24.24
—
ENS DAO Ecosystem stewrad, Limes.eth, delivered their ENS Roundup, the comprehensive bi-weekly digest of ENS ecosystem news. It includes updates on various fronts: from the ENS blog and web enhancements to app integrations featuring Box Domains powered by 3dns_inc. Highlights encompass significant milestones such as @Uniswap’s registration of 450,000 uni.eth subnames, Onthisxyz’s Shortcut discovery page named by ENS domains, and Kraken’s integration of ENS. Watch the round up here. - 04.24.24
—
Fluidkey has announced its transition to beta on the Base blockchain, offering privacy-preserving ENS names. The platform has generated over 40,000 such addresses so far and opened beta access for 48 hours. Base, the most requested chain since Fluidkey’s launch, is now their default. Fluidkey is supported by partners like Safe, ENS, and Privy, and is focused on enhancing onchain privacy without compromising user experience. Claim your privacy-preserving ENS name here. — 04.25.24
—
The Giveth Builders Quadratic Funding round concluded with a $20,000 DAI matching pool sponsored by the Public Goods Working Group on the OP Mainnet. The round, facilitated by Giveth, ran from March 25th to April 8th, 2024, receiving 412 donations from 134 donors, totaling $7,503 USD. Donations were made in various tokens across several networks, supporting 34 projects focused on building public goods. Eligible donations required a Gitcoin passport score of 5 or more and a minimum value of $0.90 USD. Recirculated and sybil-related donations were disqualified. A list of participating projects can be found here. For more details, read Giveth’s blog. — 04.26.24
—
Namespace has facilitated the integration of ENS into Tatum SDK, allowing developers to easily implement ENS functionality using an extension built by Namespace and published on Tatum’s open-source extension platform. This integration enables developers to register ENS domains, manage text records, and resolve addresses and names, promoting easier adoption of decentralized identities in blockchain applications. — 04.29.24
—
ENS and Talent Protocol have partnered to allow builders to enhance their Talent Passport with an ENS credential. This partnership enables users to boost their Builder Score with an ENS name, sync their ENS profile data easily, and introduces ENS-powered usernames, which are coming soon. The partnership allows users with an ENS domain as their primary name to automatically receive an ENS credential, boosting their Builder Score. Users can also sync their ENS profile data with their Talent Passport profile and use interoperable Web3 usernames. Talent Protocol encourages builders to create a Talent Passport, bring their reputation on-chain, and earn rewards as early adopters. Try it now. — 04.29.24
—
The latest portfolio dWebsite template by Webhash.eth, tailored for Web3 pioneers, has been launched on their website This template offers seamless integration for .eth and .box domains. — 04.29.24
—
Namespace has announced that all ENS Name owners can now issue (gift or sell) Subnames through Farcaster Frames on Warpcast. This exciting feature allows users to list any ENS Name on the app and let people mint through a frame, with ENS Subnames now available on Farcaster. The process involves first listing an ENS Name on the Namespace app, then generating a frame through the Widgets section to issue the Subnames.
To list an ENS Name on the Namespace app, owners should go to the Account tab, select the Manager tab, and choose the ENS Name they want to issue Subnames from. To generate a frame, owners should go to Widgets, click on Frames, choose a custom or default frame, select their ENS name, and share on Warpcast.
More detailed instructions on how to list an ENS name and generate a Farcaster frame can be found by clicking each respective link. — 04.30.24
—
The Ethereum Follow Protocol (EFP) has recently undergone significant updates, with the successful completion of hiring efforts leading to the formation of a strong team. To stay informed, follow @ethfollowpr on X for regular updates. Additionally, interested individuals can review the open-source code on their Github repository. —05.01.24
—
Eth.limo has announced a significant rebranding initiative, accompanied by the launch of a new website The new website showcases an updated design and user experience, aimed at enhancing accessibility and engagement for users. — 05.02.24
—
Nicnames announced the release of an ICANN-accredited registrar for .ETH domain registrations and renewals. This launch coincides with the 7th anniversary of ENS, marking a significant milestone. Key features include easy registration and renewal via hardware wallets like Ledger for added security. Metamask users can also manage domains directly in the wallet interface. Nicnames offers a custodial wallet creation service for newcomers to the crypto ecosystem, bridging the gap between Web2 and Web3 domains. Future plans include introducing autorenewals for .ETH domains and more integrations to improve user experience, with a focus on community feedback to shape decentralized web services. —05.04.24
—
Integrous is a Web3-focused project specializing in onboarding businesses and individuals with a user-friendly approach. They have developed a pilot ENS advertisement that emphasizes the simplicity of wallet transactions. The ENS advertisement showcases a user-friendly approach to onboarding businesses and individuals. The ad emphasizes the simplicity of wallet transactions using ENS. As of this writing, it has garnered 71,263 impressions and 1,653 engagements.
To watch the advertisement, visit: Integrous.eth on X.
—
Meta-Governance – @5pence.eth
ENS Ecosystem – @slobo.eth
Public Goods – @vegayp
DAO Secretary - @limes
The responsibilities of the Lead Stewards & Secretary are set out in Rule 9.8 and Rule 9.9 of the Working Group Rules.
—
Working Group | Time | Schedule | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 1pm UTC | Tuesday | |
![]() | 4pm UTC | Thursday | |
![]() | 5pm UTC | Thursday |
—
The Meta-Governance Working Group provides governance oversight and support for working group operations through DAO tooling and governance initiatives.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Tuesdays · 1:00 – 1:45pm UTC
Term 5 Meta-Governance Stewards:
—
The primary mission of ENS DAO is to govern the protocol and allocate resources in line with its constitution and objectives. However, changing economic dynamics make the DAO vulnerable to attacks aimed at draining its treasury. This proposal seeks approval from the ENS DAO to counter governance attacks by creating a veto role (veto.ensdao.eth), endowed with approximately 3.8 million $ENS delegated from ENS Labs. This role will be controlled by a multisig wallet pertaining to a trusted group to veto proposals that threaten the DAO’s integrity or violate its constitution. It also introduces a CANCEL role, assigned to the same multisig wallet.
Cast your vote: Snapshot
—
This proposal suggests implementing a vesting schedule for $ENS tokens distributed to stewards of all three ENS DAO Working Groups. The proposed vesting will occur over a 24-month period to align steward interests with the DAO’s long-term goals, with provisions for both current and retroactive vesting terms.
Cast your vote: Snapshot 1
—
—

Meta-Governance steward, estmcmxci.eth, presented the Q1 review encapsulating the initiatives, outcomes, and future trajectory of the ENS DAO Meta-Governance Working Group.
Implementation of Service Provider Streams
Drafting of ENS DAO Bylaws
Establishment of a $ENS Refund Policy
Introduction of a Steward Vesting Proposal
Implementation of Gasless Voting on Tally
Context of Meta-Governance responsibilities
Transition between steward terms
Ongoing efforts to empower stakeholders and ensure governance process integrity
Introduction of veto.ensdao.eth
Enablement of the CANCEL role
Continued discussions on compensation guidelines and governance distribution
The Meta-Governance Q1 Review serves as a roadmap for navigating the evolving landscape of ENS DAO governance, fostering collaboration, transparency, and innovation within the ecosystem.
—
The ENS DAO Q1 Spending Report offers a comprehensive overview of the financial activities and governance distribution within the ENS Working Groups during the first quarter of 2024. Divided into two sections—Spending and Governance Distribution—the report provides valuable insights into the utilization of resources and the allocation of governance tokens.
In Q1, the total spending across all working groups amounted to $664k USD, with meticulous breakdowns provided for each group.
Ecosystem: The Ecosystem working group expended $410,274 USDC during the quarter, covering various initiatives such as hackathons, grants, and other operational expenses related to events like ETH Denver and ETH London.
Meta-Governance: A total expenditure of 163,279 USDC and 3.42 ETH was reported by the Meta-Governance working group. This includes compensation for stewards, expenses related to DAO tooling, and payments to Lemma Solutions for drafting the ENS DAO Bylaws.
Public Goods: The Public Goods working group disbursed $79,851 USDC, primarily directed towards grants and event support for hackathons like ETH Denver and ETH Global London.
Each group’s spending is further dissected to provide a detailed understanding of where the funds were allocated, ranging from hackathon sponsorships to operational costs.
In addition to financial transactions, the Meta-Governance working group distributed 589 ENS tokens during Q1. These tokens were distributed to 13 recipients who accidentally sent ENS tokens to the ENS token contract, rendering their tokens inaccessible. This initiative aims to rectify inadvertent transactions and ensure fairness within the ecosystem.
The meticulous documentation of spending and governance distribution underscores the ENS DAO’s commitment to transparency and accountability. By providing a transparent overview of financial activities and governance token distributions, the report empowers stakeholders to make informed decisions and actively participate in the DAO’s operations and initiatives.
—
The Security Council proposal seeks to bolster the DAO’s security measures against cryptoeconomic threats by enabling the allow contract to initiate the cancel function on the timelock, preventing malicious exploitation of voting mechanisms. While addressing immediate concerns, some members, like Jengajojo and Spike, raise worries about the proposal’s impact on decentralization efforts. However, proponents like avsa.eth stress the necessity of thwarting malicious activities in the short term, emphasizing that the Security Council’s role is limited to canceling such actions. Discussions also revolve around token delegation within the DAO, urging members to contribute insights for further consideration, as transparency and long-term sustainability remain paramount in navigating these complexities.
—
Lemma Solutions has provided the Meta-Governance Working Group with its first draft of the Bylaws. The Working Group will review this submission and continue to deliberate on next steps.
—
@karpatkey presented an update on the Endowment, reporting a current value of $92.7 million.
Endowment Overview:
Portfolio Composition:
Ether: 76.0%
Stablecoins: 24.0%
Capital Utilization: 99.96%
Current APR: 4.48%
General Comments:
ZRM v2 Migration Proposal to be posted
—
Karpatkey’s upcoming proposal introduces the activation of Roles Modifier v2, enhancing treasury management operations with features like allowances and improved visualization. The revised permissions policy enables swapping actions on CoW Swap while removing obsolete actions and protocols, ensuring robustness and security within the DAO ecosystem. Read the proposal in full here.
—
The Ecosystem Working Group strengthens the ENS Protocol by facilitating developer relations, identifying and funding high-potential projects that enhance ENS, and bolstering support for ENS-aligned initiatives overall.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Thursdays · 4:00 – 5:00pm UTC
Term 5 Ecosystem Stewards:
—
The ENS Ecosystem Working Group sponsored the opening night event at FarCon
The Working Group will have a presence at ETHCC in Brussels, Belgium from July 8-11.
—
View the announcement on ENS Twitter.
You can now explore and register .box names through the ENS Manager App, alongside .eth names.
Greg has built a website (personal project) displaying incoming .box registrations since they are all public on-chain.
Ongoing maintenance and bug fixes.
Improving name validation and search functionality.
If you notice bugs, send them to the developer telegram group.
—
Gitcoin Round 20 has concluded, having offered a matching fund of 125k USDC for projects dedicated to advancing, expanding, or supporting the decentralized identity system centered around ENS. The round closed on May 7th, with approximately $7800 in donations already contributed across 39 projects, totaling 6700 donations. A dashboard displaying statistics for the round can be accessed through Gitcoin’s Explorer. Additionally, Limes.eth hosted a “Speed Donating” space to promote projects participating in the round. A recording of Spaces Held during this period is available here,
—
Matteoikari.eth has developed an AI-powered API tailored for converting text into smart contract code. This innovation enables users to write natural language commands for onchain transactions, with Brian AI acting as an intermediary, comprehending user input and facilitating the execution of transactions. The project has garnered recognition by winning several bounties in hackathons and has since evolved into a fully-fledged startup. Currently, the platform is in public beta, with the API readily accessible. Efforts are underway to integrate the service with ENS. Key functionalities include checking ENS availability, registering an ENS for a specified duration, verifying the expiration time of an ENS, renewing an ENS for a specified period, and assessing the associated cost of renewal or registration.
David Truong presented x23.ai, which utilizes Large Language Models (LLMs) to curate information on DAOS. This innovative initiative pulls information from various sources, including Github, forums, and more. Particularly noteworthy is the ENS-specific page titled “The ENS community” on x23.ai’s platform. Currently, the project covers 29 communities, allowing users to search across all these communities seamlessly. For further engagement, you can reach David Truong on Telegram: @daveytea.
—
@slobo.eth from Resolver Works presented a platform, utilized to educate students at Columbia Business School on minting NFTs on Arbitrum. These NFTs also grant ENS and are tradable on OpenSea. Additionally, they also initiated a project titled “Resolvers & Latency,” aimed at summarizing existing resolvers in ENS and their latency to obtain accurate performance statistics.
@thecap.eth from Namespace shared updates on Namespace, simplifying the integration and issuance of ENS Subnames to users within Web3. Recently, Namespace introduced a new feature allowing users to create Frames in Warpcast, enabling the issuance of subdomains through an intuitive UI. Additionally, @thecap.eth is actively enhancing subdomain creation Frames with more customization options and is planning to establish L2 infrastructure for issuing subdomains on Layer 2 solutions.
—
Premm.eth and Slobo.eth have initiated discussions regarding the establishment of a formal Ethereum Name Service Improvement Proposal (ENSIP) process. The primary objective of the ENSIP project is to standardize and provide high-quality documentation for ENS itself and the conventions built upon it. The project’s repository can be found on GitHub under unruggable-labs/ENSIPS. One notable document within the repository is ensip-D10-001.md. An idea proposed is to discuss ENSIPs on a monthly cadence during the Ecosystem calls. For further information or engagement, Premm.eth can be reached on social media platforms such as X or Telegram under the handle @nxt3d.
—
The Public Goods Working Group supports the greater Ethereum ecosystem by identfying and funding open-source development.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Thursdays · 5:00 - 5:45pm UTC
Term 5 Public Goods Stewards:
—
DAppNode, led by Lanski and Marc, offers free open-source software for running blockchain nodes without technical expertise. The platform provides a user-friendly UI for installing nodes like Bitcoin and Zcash. It promotes decentralization and encourages individuals to run their own nodes.
To address Miner Extractable Value (MEV) challenges, DAppNode introduced Smooth, which distributes MEV rewards more equitably among solo stakers. A statistics page shows higher returns for those in Smooth.
For installation, refer to DAppNode’s Installation Overview. The project is seeking large validators like Lido to join Smooth and share rewards. DAppNode is also developing tech v2, focusing on restaking protocols, multi-unsubscribe features, and enhancements in smart contracts and oracles.
DAppNode has integrated Optimism nodes and plans to add zkEVM and other Layer 2 solutions. @Coltron.eth praised the team’s commitment to large grants and efforts.
—
Voting for ENS Small Grants concluded, distributing 7.5 ETH to projects that support the Web3 ecosystem. The prize breakdown is as follows: 3 ETH for first place, 2 ETH for second, and 1 ETH for third. Projects in the top ten receive 0.25 ETH each. Winnings will be awarded shortly. — 05.05.24
—
This perpetual PG bounty seeks innovative projects aligning with ENS’s ethos as a public good, aiming to enrich the Ethereum ecosystem. Developers are invited to propose solutions focusing on decentralization, security, user empowerment, adoption, and innovation, with a chance to win a bounty pot of 5,000 USDC. Submit your project here.
—
ENS DAO offers several resources for understanding and participating in its ecosystem.
ENS DAO Basics: Details the ENS DAO, including voting and governance.
Support Docs: Provides guidance on registration, renewals, and development aspects.
Governance Docs: Offers additional insights into governance structure.
ENS Agora: Governance hub for proposal review and voting.
Give Feedback: Feedback platform where users share input to improve ENS.
ENS Repository: The ENS Protocol’s main Github Repository.
–
Thank you very much for reading! Goodbye. 👋


Newsletter Roundup (tl;dr):
ENS Labs Update: ENS Web Update, Cornell Blockchain Conference
Community Updates: ETH Limo Q1 Update, Steward Lecture @ Columbia Biz
Meta-Governance: Voting Period Results, Addressing Attack Vectors
Ecosystem: Q1 Grants Summary, ENS Identity Round
Public Goods: Giveth Builders Round Update
Welcome to the ENS DAO Newsletter:
New editions — published bi-weekly (Tuesday)
Previous editions are archived on the ENS DAO Archive.
New proposals are broadcasted to Telegram.
ENS DAO Dashboard is now available for public review.
Submit feedback — tell us what to feature!
—
Refer to ENS DAO Calendar for ENS DAO working group calls and other events.
Calendar: Public Access / Access with Gmail
—
The Term 5 Dashboard, managed by the Meta-Governance Working Group, provides updated summaries of DAO governance and initiatives. Regularly check it for the latest developments.
Proposal | Type | Discussion | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
Upgrade DNSSEC support | Executable | ||
Commence Streams for Service Providers | Executable | ||
Determine ENS Labs’ next steps in eth.link litigation | Social |
Note: A minimum of 100k $ENS is required to submit executable proposals. Once a proposal gains momentum, the stewards will prioritize it for a vote during the designated voting window. See our Governance Docs for more information. To view the real-time distribution of voting power among delegates, visit votingpower.xyz.
—
@Avsa outlined a Governance Distribution Program in an effort to increase the $ENS voting supply. It details a strategy for distributing ENS tokens to DAO members — review the temp-check here. — 03.19.24
—
Avsa.eth proposed enabling a CANCEL function that would assign the role of canceller to a multisig controlled by a smart contract created by Nick.eth. This function allows a select council of trusted DAO participants to exercise a large number of ‘no’ votes, enabling them to veto proposals that risk the integrity of the ENS DAO — review the temp-check here. — 04.12.24
—
In March 2024, the ENS Protocol registered 21k new .eth domains, bringing the total to 2.1 million. The protocol generated revenue of $1.3 million during this period, all of which was allocated to the ENS DAO. The number of Ethereum account holders with at least one ENS name increased by 18.3k, totaling 844k. There were 16.7k primary ENS names set, making the overall count 788k. Additionally, 3.9k new avatar records were created, reaching a cumulative total of 159k.
—
ENS announced several significant improvements aimed at enhancing the functionality and user experience of their platform. These updates include everything from a redesigned website to advanced security measures, reflecting ENS’s commitment to providing robust and user-friendly web3 infrastructure.
Here’s a summary of the key highlights from the update:
New Documentation Site: A revamped documentation site with added event videos.
Gasless DNSSEC Support: Enhanced support for importing DNS names without gas fees, with a streamlined offchain process.
Website Redesign: Updates to the ENS domain website, improving visual elements like fonts and icons.
Search Function Improvements: Case-insensitive search capabilities and removal of risky autocomplete features.
Testing Infrastructure: Transition from Cypress to Playwright for better efficiency in end-to-end testing.
Web3 Starter Kit: Introduction of a Web3 starter kit using Next.js for easier project setups.
Security and Quality of Life Enhancements: Multiple updates to improve user experience and security across the platform.
For more information, you can view the full update here. — 04.17.24
—
Luc.eth, Developer Relations at ENS Labs, announced the release of new documentation for Enstate, an innovative self-hostable ENS API. Enstate is engineered to provide resolution services and more at remarkable speeds for the ENS ecosystem. These documents aim to assist developers in integrating and utilizing the API for various applications, facilitating enhanced interaction with the Ethereum Name Service.
Read the documentation here. — 04.17.24
—
The ENS Labs support documentation was recently updated to provide guidance on using a .eth name in Farcaster, a “sufficiently decentralized” onchain social app. The documentation includes prerequisites and a step-by-step guide written by Dylan Meador (bdl.eth). It outlines a process to add your ENS name to your Farcaster profile, highlighting four key steps designed to ensure simplicity and clarity.
Read the guide here. — 04.18.24
—
Cornell Blockchain, a student organization of Cornell University, is hosting a panel on Web3 growth at the Cornell Blockchain Conference slated for April 26, 2024. The panel features several industry professionals including Marta Cura from ENS Labs. They will share insights on what it takes from a business development and marketing perspective to build ventures for billions. Participants can claim their tickets here. — 04.19.24
—
Talent Protocol and ENS are hosting a Builders Brunch on Friday, May 3rd, at PoolsideCo. The event is designed for networking and enjoying great food. Attendees are encouraged to RSVP for this gathering where developers and enthusiasts can connect. — 04.22.24
—
ENS Radio: Fluidkey and Onchain Privacy — 04.10.24
ENS Radio: Zondax — 04.17.24
Galaxy: Crypto UX Promises and Pitfalls with Nick Johnson — 04.17.24
OSPN: How NFTs allow for True Ownership with Evan Moyer — 04.19.24
—
Participate in improving the ENS Ecosystem! Provide feedback on Canny, where members of ENS Labs and Working Group stewards will work to address your submissions. The ENS community can submit feedback in three main categories: Feature Requests, Integrations, and Bug Reports. You can also participate by upvoting or commenting on existing submissions. We’re listening to the community, send your feedback on Canny now.
—
Uniswap Labs recently announced that over 400,000 uni.eth usernames have been claimed. Users can claim their uni.eth subname for free on the Uniswap Mobile app. — 04.09.24
—
Onthis.xyz launched a dedicated search page for shortcuts designed to make it easier for users to find no-code executable on-chain actions. Many of these shortcuts are named via ENS. — 04.11.24
—
Eth.limo has introduced several updates, focusing on a redesigned architecture, support for multiple RPC providers, and a more efficient reverse proxy structure. The updated service includes new features like full end-to-end IPv6 and IPFS CDN with _rewrites file support. Other improvements cover improved caching, easier configuration with dynamic reloads, and custom domain routing logic.
Read the update in full here. — 04.12.24
—
Hidayath.eth from WebHash announced the introduction of the Farcaster Block. This new feature allows ENS names to not only function as addresses but also serves as a gateway to showcase a Farcaster feed directly into a dWebsite. — 04.12.24
—
The article by Dragonite.eth explores the Pokémon ENS collection, which has become popular within the Web3 community. The piece discusses the collection’s origins, which began with minting Pokémon-themed names on the Ethereum blockchain, and highlights its growing momentum in 2023. It touches on the community infrastructure, such as Discord and Twitter, and notes some of the significant sales and collaborative projects. The article provides an overview of the community-driven efforts and connections with notable Web3 personalities. — 04.14.24
—
The Dapp List, a platform for Web3 projects, recently awarded XP to everyone who shared their ENS Name in a recent post. Users can claim their XP drop by heading to the website, connecting their wallet, and clicking on the XP Drop. This is a concerted effort by the Dapp List team to offer points to its core user base. — 04.15.24
—
Kraken, a prominent cryptocurrency exchange, introduced a wallet that includes support for ENS names. This integration allows users to utilize their ENS domains within Kraken’s platform, enhancing the user experience by streamlining transactions with easily recognizable blockchain domain names. — 04.17.24
—
Brian is a tool that facilitates various functions to administer ENS names, including registration, renewal, availability checks, expiration tracking, and setting primary names for ENS domains. It leverages a non-custodial AI assistant capable of executing multiple onchain transactions efficiently. Designed to support batch operations, the tool optimizes handling multiple ENS domains simultaneously, enhancing the user experience within the ENS community. — 04.17.24
—

Mely.eth posted an illustration of the newly formed “Fellowship of ENS,” a group pledged to safeguard ENS DAO against governance attacks. The image depicts a few characters, each representing prominent members of the ENS community who have taken the pledge to protect the DAO. These individuals are given a delegate veto mechanism through which they can exercise their power to cast decisive “no” votes against proposals that might jeopardize the integrity of the ENS DAO. This move ensures a more secure and protected governance structure, with a select group of trusted DAO participants actively committed to upholding the ENS constitution and defending against any harmful actions or governance attacks. — 04.17.24
—
Mailchain, a provider of Web3 email services, emphasizes the importance of incorporating Web3 identities into growth strategies. In the article, they underscore the potential of Web3 identities to vastly enhance the flexibility, creativity, and human element of our digital interactions. Mailchain highlights that an ENS domain is more than just a digital address—it’s a form of personal expression.
Read the article here. — 04.18.24
—
Usesrs on Console, an onchain community platform, can now utilize their ENS domains as usernames within Console Live Audio Rooms. — 04.18.24
—
Slobo.eth, an ENS DAO Ecosystem Steward, recently gave a guest lecture at Columbia University’s business school. He provided an onchain experience for over 50 students, allowing them to mint their own Layer 2 ENS subnames using Namestone. The students could create an onchain name, update text records, and trade names on Opensea. Gas fees were near zero, thanks to storage on Arbitrum. This initiative served as an engaging introduction to ENS technology and its potential applications, giving students a hands-on experience with blockchain concepts. — 04.18.24
—
Nick.eth shared an ENS advertising jingle developed using Suno AI. Listen to it here. — 04.19.24
—
Liubenben.eth, an ENS Delegate, recently provided a Mandarin Chinese translation of ENS Labs’ weekly ecosystem updates. Read the translation here. — 04.20.24
—
Address.Vision, created by portdev.eth, allows users to view Ethereum addresses or ENS names and their details in a streamlined interface. The platform provides insights into token balances, NFTs, and other Ethereum-related data across different chains like Base, Ethereum, Polygon, and Optimism. The site shows detailed breakdowns of balances, token types, and QR codes for easy sharing, showcasing a modern and visually appealing interface. The site also features custom address unfurls, allowing for convenient tracking and visualization of Ethereum addresses. — 04.20.24
—
Raffy.eth has developed CCIPRewriter.sol, which allows users to customize ENS names and adjust off-chain gateways. The “ccipr.eth” ENS suffix can be added to any ENS name to replace its off-chain gateway, offering benefits for privacy and debugging. To view a demonstration of the CCIPRewriter tool, including its key components like the name input field, the replacement endpoint, and the base name, follow this link. — 04.21.24
—
Premm.eth has introduced a new blog discussing the concept of an AI URI, a method to create a uniform resource identifier for AI-generated content. The concept can be applied to various contexts, such as embedding in emails or text messages, linking AI-generated content on ENS, or as part of an existing standard like NFTs. This approach can offer a semantic link between AI prompts and URLs, allowing the AI to interpret and render the intended content. The blog explores the potential use cases of AI URIs in the context of evolving technologies and data representation. — 04.22.24
—
Meta-Governance – @5pence.eth
ENS Ecosystem – @slobo.eth
Public Goods – @vegayp
DAO Secretary - @limes
The responsibilities of the Lead Stewards & Secretary are set out in Rule 9.8 and Rule 9.9 of the Working Group Rules.
—
Working Group | Time | Schedule | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 1pm UTC | Tuesday |
—
The Meta-Governance Working Group provides governance oversight and support for working group operations through DAO tooling and governance initiatives.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Tuesdays · 1:00 – 1:45pm UTC
Term 5 Meta-Governance Stewards:
—
The first proposal, [EP 5.5], related to the ENS Public Goods Working Group Term 5 for Q1/Q2, sought funding in accordance with the Working Group Rules. It resulted in the successful execution of the proposal, with the transfer of 450.3k USDC from the designated wallet to the Public Goods working group multi sig.
The second proposal, [EP 5.6], aimed to enable self-funding for the Endowment to ensure the continuation of operations. This included measures for financing the Endowment as well as reimbursement to the Meta-Governance Working Group for interim funding provided during January and February. The outcome was the successful execution of the proposal, with the transaction processed through the specified wallet.
For more details, visit the Voting Period Bulletin.
—
Corina Pascu from Dhive has presented their initiative as a Small Grants applicant and is seeking support. Dhive is positioned as a data hub, aiming to create a single, accessible location for both onchain and offchain data. They are planning to launch their service in June. Additionally, Dhive intends to establish a trusted credentials environment and implement a notification system to facilitate direct communication from the DAO to users. More about their project can be found on their website at dhive.io.
—
Nick.eth introduced a smart contract ‘delegate’ labeled veto.ensdao.eth with 3.8M delegated tokens. This measure is a part of a safeguarding strategy to minimize governance attack vectors, which have been recognized as a significant threat to DAOs.
A key measure implemented is a contract that allows a select group of trusted DAO participants to veto proposals that may pose a risk to the DAO. This veto power is backed by a substantial delegation of ENS tokens from Labs to ensure it has enough weight to be effective. However, this veto can only be exercised by individuals granted special permission and who have agreed to a pledge that they will only use it to prevent governance attacks or actions that would breach the ENS constitution.
Looking forward, there is a proposal to establish a CANCEL role within the DAO, controlled by a multisig, to provide a balance of power and ensure any use of such a decisive action would be seriously considered and used only to safeguard the DAO.
—
@karpatkey, in collaboration with @Steakhouse, has provided the latest insights into the DAO’s endowment, which is currently valued at $91.5 million.
Endowment Overview:
Portfolio Composition:
Ether: 75.7%
Stablecoins: 24.3%
Capital Utilization: 99.9%
Current APR: 5.13%
Operational Moves:
Claimed rewards and converted to ETH
General Comments:
Executed endowment self-funding
Ethereum for March fees is now available
—
The March Endowment report is now available on Karpatkey’s Website. This report provides a detailed overview of the endowment’s finances and allocations. A high-level overview is made available below for reader’s convenience:
Balance Overview:
Total funds in the endowment: $104,202,838
Capital utilization: 99.8%
Monthly DeFi results: $443,017
Annual Percentage Yield (APY): 5.27%
Review the full report prepared by prepared by Karpatkey here.
—
Financial Overview:
Revenue > Cash Burn, Runway: 211 months
Revenues: $3.2M (up from $2.4M last month, and $3.1M last year)
Cash inflow: $1.3M (down from $1.5M last month, and from $1.7M last year), exceeding cash burn by 1.97 times
Normalized Cash Burn: $0.7M, with Reserves now at $140M (ETH: $108M, USDC: $32M)
Total Endowment: $95.8M, with P&L of $6.2M, primarily from ETH mark-to-market gains
Review the full report prepared by @Steakhouse here.
—
The Ecosystem Working Group strengthens the ENS Protocol by facilitating developer relations, identifying and funding high-potential projects that enhance ENS, and bolstering support for ENS-aligned initiatives overall.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Thursdays · 4:00 – 5:00pm UTC
Term 5 Ecosystem Stewards:
—
ENS Ecosystem grants support the development and improvement of the ENS protocol and ecosystem, with a focus on technical projects. These grants are awarded retroactively based on demonstrated value and are intended to foster innovation within the ENS community. The following is a summary of projects that have been awarded Ecosystem Grants in Q1:
Project | Description | Grant (USDC) |
|---|---|---|
An API for resolving and reverse-resolving ENS names and addresses. | $10,000 | |
Service for retrieving ENS text records, avatars, and NFTs via a simple API. | $10,000 | |
Privacy-preserving ENS project for funds management and transactions. | $25,000 | |
Tool for creating “Shortcuts” for on-chain actions using ENS. | $25,000 | |
A block explorer providing insights into Ethereum’s consensus and execution layers. |
—
ENS is set to sponsor the opening night at FarCon from May 2-5 in Venice Beach, California. There has been an extension for ticket availability provided by Warpcast. Additionally, ENS will be present at EthCCfrom July 8-11 in Brussels, Belgium.
—
ENS Labs updates its documentation weekly, with input from both internal and external contributors. Feedback is encouraged via the dedicated Telegram channel. Continuous front-end updates are posted on the ENS Blog, including the April 2024 update. Developers can use the enstate.rs API to set up ENS services or learn more about the platform.
The Graph is transitioning to a decentralized network, set for completion by mid-June. ENS Labs is preparing for this, with no immediate action required. Additionally, ENS Labs is conducting long-term research into Layer 2 solutions for better scalability and collaborating with teams integrating ENS into their projects.
—
Subname Frame on Warpcast
@Cap.eth introduced a novel Farcaster frame through Warpcast, enabling users to mint a free ENS Subname from GotFramed.eth. This frame is gasless and fully resolvable, incorporating the user’s address record, with more ENS-themed enhancements planned for release.
—
ENS Round-up Series
@limes.eth introduced an ENS Round-up series which aims to provide updates in a visual format for those who prefer video content. The initiative is set to deliver new content bi-weekly.
—
Dart Implementation
Peter Anyaogu has developed a Dart implementation of ENSIP-15, the ENS Name Normalization Standard, and the normalization library is now accessible as a Dart package.
—
Browser Extenstions
@maintainer.eth showcased a dashboard/Chrome Extension for accessing various ENS, Web3, Tax, and more information and applications, sparking a conversation about enhancing the accessibility of this extension/dashboard.
—
AI Agents
@prem published a blog post titled “Introducing ai:” on Medium, discussing the integration of AI prompts into browsers.
—
EVM Chains
Griff Green led a discussion about EIP155 Namespace for EVM Chains and addressed the use of CAIP-10 for registering chain-specific addresses within ENS. The goal is to start registering EOAs as EOAs rather than tied to a specific chain. There’s an initiative to merge CAIP69 into CAIP10 to facilitate the specification of EOA wallets. Further context is provided by comparing ERC-4337 and EIP-3074, highlighting the importance of understanding the nuances between different EIPs and ERCs as they relate to ENS and blockchain interoperability. The discussions and proposals are documented in ENS improvement proposals and GitHub repositories.
—
EP-10 funded Spruce’s community-run OpenID Connect (OIDC) Identity Provider Server. Integrated with Ethereum’s KZG ceremony, the $250,000 budget allocated $75,000 for community rewards, $175,000 for Spruce’s maintenance, and $70,000 for community projects. Part of this funding went to Davis Shaver’s WordPress work with SIWE + ENS names, with the rest designated for partnerships in the GG20 ENS Identity Round. For full details, check the complete review.
—
The Gitcoin Round 20 Review Period followed a successful two-week application phase. ENS is providing $100k USDC for matching, with a total of 71 applications submitted before the closure. The donation period is set to begin on April 23, and stewards are tasked with reviewing the applications to ensure they meet the required guidelines. Gitcoin utilizes quadratic funding for its grants program; additional information on quadratic funding can be found at wtfisqf.com.
—
The Public Goods Working Group supports the greater Ethereum ecosystem by identfying and funding open-source development.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Thursdays · 5:00 - 5:45pm UTC
Term 5 Public Goods Stewards:
—
The Giveth funding round has concluded, recording 412 donations and supporting 32 eligible projects with a $20,000 matching pool. There were 217 unique donors, contributing a total of $7503. Donations were made across various blockchain chains, and many projects were verified, with minimal concerns of dubious activities. A detailed analysis of the round will be available soon on the Giveth website, and top-donated projects will be invited for further engagement.
—
The Small Grants voting period is on hold due to technical issues encountered with the voting interface and token weight calculations. The problem with token value has been resolved, but a front-end fix is still pending. There is a recommendation to halt the voting on the ENS Grants page until the issue is resolved. The consensus is to wait until the front-end issues are addressed to resume voting. The delay has expedited front-end updates for a quicker resolution. The voting round is expected to restart with the submissions that have already been made.
—
MetaGo Project, presented by Eugene and Alex, received a $40k grant from MetaGov and DAOStar for research aimed at enhancing grant coordination. They hosted a summit on Web3 grants in Denver and are developing a common DAO standard, collaborating with various organizations like the Ethereum Foundation and Stellar. Current projects include creating a common standard for DAOs, improving grant program success metrics, and supporting grantee communities.
—
John Hoopes presented Astral.Global, focusing on the development of dApps that leverage geographic location. Astral Global provides open-source tools and infrastructure to facilitate the creation of such dapps. They offer Spatial Registries, which are onchain geospatial databases allowing the registration of geographic assets like points, lines, and polygons, with open access and upcoming privacy-preserving features. They also provide location Attestations for verifiable location claims of persons or devices, compatible with EAS and Astral’s spatial registries.
—
ENS DAO offers several resources for understanding and participating in its ecosystem.
ENS DAO Basics: Details the ENS DAO, including voting and governance.
Support Docs: Provides guidance on registration, renewals, and development aspects.
Governance Docs: Offers additional insights into governance structure.
ENS Agora: Governance hub for proposal review and voting.
Give Feedback: Feedback platform where users share input to improve ENS.
ENS Repository: The ENS Protocol’s main Github Repository.
–
Thank you very much for reading! Goodbye. 👋🏼


Newsletter Roundup (tl;dr)
ENS Labs Update: ENS Stats, ETHBucharest, BUIDLASIA
Community Updates: Integrations, Merchandise, Call for Feedback
Meta-Governance: Active Voting Period
Ecosystem: ENS Identity Round
Public Goods: Small Grants Round
Welcome to the ENS DAO Newsletter:
New editions — published bi-weekly (Tuesday)
Previous editions are archived on the ENS DAO Archive.
New proposals are broadcasted to Telegram.
ENS DAO Dashboard is now available for public review.
Submit feedback — tell us what to feature!
—
Calendar
Refer to ENS DAO Calendar for ENS DAO working group calls and other events.
Calendar: Public Access / Access with Gmail
—
The Term 5 Dashboard, managed by the Meta-Governance Working Group, provides updated summaries of DAO governance and initiatives. Regularly check it for the latest developments.
Proposal | Type | Discussion | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
Upgrade DNSSEC support | Executable | ||
Commence Streams for Service Providers | Executable | ||
Determine ENS Labs’ next steps in eth.link litigation | Social |
Note: A minimum of 100k $ENS is required to submit executable proposals. Once a proposal gains momentum, the stewards will prioritize it for a vote during the designated voting window. See our Governance Docs for more information. To view the real-time distribution of voting power among delegates, visit votingpower.xyz.
—
@AvsA outlined a Governance Distribution Program in an effort to increase the $ENS voting supply. It details a strategy for distributing ENS tokens to DAO members — review the temp-check here. — 03.19.24
—
In March 2024, the ENS Protocol registered 21k new .eth domains, bringing the total to 2.1 million. The protocol generated revenue of $1.3 million during this period, all of which was allocated to the ENS DAO. The number of Ethereum account holders with at least one ENS name increased by 18.3k, totaling 844k. There were 16.7k primary ENS names set, making the overall count 788k. Additionally, 3.9k new avatar records were created, reaching a cumulative total of 159k.
—
ENS Labs sponsored and participated in the inaugural ETH Bucharest event and hackathon in Romania, held from March 27 to March 30. Luc.eth, a member of the Developer Relations team at ENS Labs, assumed dual roles as both a speaker and a mentor. — 03.26.24
—
BUIDLASIA is a tech conference highlighting developments and key players in the industry. Matoken.eth, a Core Developer at ENS Labs, delivered a keynote presentation titled ‘ENS Beyond Web3,’ which delved into fundamental ENS concepts, explored use cases beyond the .eth TLD, such as cb.id and Gasless DNSSEC, and discussed the future of ENS, emphasizing their recent collaboration with GoDaddy.
Slides from the presentation can be found here. — 03.27.24
—
ETHSeoul is a 3 day hackathon held in South Korea. Matoken.eth was a featured speaker and judge at the event and hackathon, where they delivered an ENS integration workshop. The workshop covered ENS fundamental concepts, how to integrate ENS into onchain apps, and its Thorin Design System.
Slides from the presenation can be found here. — 03.30.24
—
In an interview conducted by Tereza Bízková via HackerNoon, Khori Whittaker, Executive Director at ENS Labs, shared their views on decentralized identity, onchain social platforms, and the potential impact of ENS in reshaping online identity paradigms. The interview delved into the significance of decentralized social platforms and their potential to engage the next billion users.
Read the interview in full here — 04.02.24
—
ENS Radio: Ethereum Attestation Service — 03.27.24
ENS Radio: Giveth Quadratic Funding Round — 04.03.24
ENS Radio: Fluidkey and Onchain Privacy — 04.10.24
—
Participate in improving the ENS Ecosystem! Provide feedback on Canny, where members of ENS Labs and Working Group stewards will work to address your submissions. The ENS community can submit feedback in three main categories: Feature Requests, Integrations, and Bug Reports. You can also participate by upvoting or commenting on existing submissions. We’re listening to the community, send your feedback on Canny now.
—
The Public Goods Working Group partnered with Giveth for their Quadratic Funding Round. The round aimed to support public goods, specifically assisting grassroots developers and small projects with a notable impact in their fields, with $20,000 available on Optimism to match donations. Funding public goods strengthens the ecosystem, broadens the adoption of web3, and directly supports builders constructing open-source infrastructure on web3. The Donation Period closed on Monday, April 8th — donations will be distributed to participants soon afterwards. — 03.25.24
—
The Ecosystem Working Group has partnered with Gitcoin for their upcoming Grants Round. The ENS Identity Round offers a $100k matching pool to support projects developing decentralized identity on ENS. This round will support projects actively building on ENS. Any project that is contributing to the growth, enhancement, or support of the decentralized identity system around ENS is eligible. — 03.27.24
Round Details:
Submissions: April 2nd - April 16th
Round Period: April 23rd - May 7th
Apply here
—
Fluidkey announced platform enhancements integrating Privy, Safe, and ENS to improve privacy in blockchain transactions. With the latest update, users can now send and receive onchain assets without revealing their wallet addresses, thanks to the ENS integration, which enables them to utilize fkey.eth subnames and preserve fund privacy. Additionally, the login process has been streamlined, offering authentication via Farcaster, Google, or email powered by Privy for a smoother user experience. — 03.27.24
—
Basescan is a user interface that allows for searching and navigating various transactions, addresses, tokens, prices, and other onchain events on the Base Layer 2 blockchain. The blockchain explorer recently integrated support for ENS, which allows users to look up onchain activity with ENS Names. — 03.27.24
—
The Public Goods Working Group is distributing 7.5 ETH to eligible projects that benefit the Ethereum ecosystem. Projects eligible for the Public Goods small grants rounds have a broader scope that benefits the entire Ethereum or Web3 space. The voting period will conclude on April 11th, and rewards will be distributed soon thereafter. — 03.28.24
—
Blockful, a developer studio with a focus on building open-source infrastructure, recently delivered an ENS Workshop at BambaLabs, a co-working space for builders and creatives to meet and work together in the heart of Ipanema, Rio de Janeiro. — 03.28.24
—
General Magic, a Web3 Design & Development Studio, recently announced the ‘ENS Merch Shop,’ a dedicated space for purchasing ENS merchandise. The Merch Shop operates on a print-on-demand basis, offering a diverse selection of items and colors, and allows users to customize their apparel with their ENS name. Items available at the store include hats, mugs, t-shirts, and hoodies, with worldwide shipping options available.
Visit the ‘ENS Merch Shop’ here. — 04.02.24
—
Opepen, a generative art and PFP project founded by NFT artist Jack Butcher, which allows collectors to influence the evolution of the art pieces, now allows users to display their .eth addresses as usernames, enhancing the user experience by facilitating easier identification and interaction within the platform. — 04.06.24
—
Value Domain, a Japanese domain registrar, has integrated ENS name resolution functionality and Gasless DNSSEC for its DNS domains. This feature enables traditional DNS domains hosted on Value Domain to map to Ethereum wallet addresses using CCIP-Read (EIP-3668) for retrieving and verifying DNS records during resolution. — 04.06.24
—
Bankless Academy, an interactive and free-to-access web3 education platform, published a user-friendly guide that assists newcomers in registering their first ENS name. The guide covers concepts such as using ENS as a web3 passport and ENS names as ERC-721 tokens. It also explains how to create an onchain profile by setting text records and includes a step-by-step walkthrough on registering an ENS name.
Read the guide in full here. — 04.08.24
—
Magiziz.eth, a developer from Rainbow, developed a Warpcast frame designed to help ENS name users check their .eth expiration date. It prompts users to enter their ENS domain to check its expiration date. It informs of the remaining time before the domain expires and provides a direct link for renewal. — 04.08.24
—
thecap.eth of Namespace created a Warpcast frame that allows users to mint a free ENS Subname from GotFramed.eth. It provides a dual functionality: firstly, it sets up the user’s address record automatically; secondly, it integrates the user’s Farcaster profile picture into a specially designed frame. — 04.08.24
—
Limes.eth introduced “ENS Roundup”, a comprehensive bi-weekly digest that aggregates the latest developments within the ENS ecosystem. The roundup is a concerted effort to keep the community informed and engaged with developments across various facets of the ecosystem, including governance decisions, grant initiatives, and integrations. — 04.08.24
—
Meta-Governance – @5pence.eth
ENS Ecosystem – @slobo.eth
Public Goods – @vegayp
DAO Secretary - @limes
The responsibilities of the Lead Stewards & Secretary are set out in Rule 9.8 and Rule 9.9 of the Working Group Rules.
—
Working Group | Time | Schedule | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 1pm UTC | Tuesday |
—
The Meta-Governance Working Group provides governance oversight and support for working group operations through DAO tooling and governance initiatives.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Tuesdays · 1:00 – 1:45pm UTC
Term 5 Meta-Governance Stewards:
—
In accordance with Rule 10.1 of the Working Group Rules, the Pubic Goods Working Group have put forth an executable proposal detailing a funding request. If successful, a transfer of 450.3k USDC and 21.5 ETH will be initiated from wallet.ensdao.eth to the Public Goods working group.
Cast your vote on Tally.
—
Regular and routine management of the Endowment is necessary to continue operations. This executable proposal details a measure to finance the Endowment, as well as a reimbursement for interim funding provided from the Meta-Governance Multi-sig to settle Endowment fees during the months of January and February. The payload will be executed by wallet.ensdao.eth to create the aforementioned allowance and reimbursement.
Cast your vote on Tally.
—
—
Aseem Sood demonstrated a fully onchain Paymaster System designed for subsidized voting. This system allows wallets to have their gas costs to be subsidized, effectively addressing the cost prohibitive onchain transactions that often serve as a barrier to voting. The solution employs account abstraction in conjunction with smart wallets, eliminating the need for centralized services. The only requirement for maintenance is the periodic refilling of the Paymaster. The system is designed to cover costs only for specific function calls and includes a feature to limit expenses by only paying for gas when it falls below a certain threshold.
View the Repository here.
—
Tally introduced gasless voting for ENS Delegates, allowing them to vote on proposals without incurring gas fees and making participation in the ENS DAO less cost-prohibitive. The update specifies that delegates need to set their primary name and have at least 100 ENS in delegated voting power to be eligible for the feature.
—
@karpatkey recently presented an update on its Endowment, reporting a current value of $96.7 million. This marks an increase from the $95.3 million reported on March 19th. The update included details on operational changes, particularly noting the withdrawal of Ethereum in preparation for a forthcoming project or operation.
Endowment Overview:
Portfolio Composition:
Ether: 77.1%
Stablecoins: 22.9%
Capital Utilization: 99.8%
Current APR: 4.97%
Operational Moves:
Withdrew ETH for upcoming executable
—
The March Endowment report is now available on Karpatkey’s Website. This report provides a detailed overview of the endowment’s finances and allocations. A high-level overview is made available below for reader’s convenience:
Balance Overview:
Total funds in the endowment: $104,202,838
Capital utilization: 99.8%
Monthly DeFi results: $443,017
Annual Percentage Yield (APY): 5.27%
Review the full report prepared by prepared by Karpatkey here.
—
Financial Overview:
Revenue > Cash Burn, Runway: 211 months
Revenues: $3.2M (up from $2.4M last month, and $3.1M last year)
Cash inflow: $1.3M (down from $1.5M last month, and from $1.7M last year), exceeding cash burn by 1.97 times
Normalized Cash Burn: $0.7M, with Reserves now at $140M (ETH: $108M, USDC: $32M)
Total Endowment: $95.8M, with P&L of $6.2M, primarily from ETH mark-to-market gains
Review the full report prepared by @Steakhouse here.
—
The Ecosystem Working Group strengthens the ENS Protocol by facilitating developer relations, identifying and funding high-potential projects that enhance ENS, and bolstering support for ENS-aligned initiatives overall.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Thursdays · 4:00 – 5:00pm UTC
Term 5 Ecosystem Stewards:
—
Greg Skril, from Developer Relations at ENS Labs, provided an update on a series of current and upcoming initiatives.
At the ETHLondon Hackathon, 24 teams developed projects on ENS, and 5 teams were awarded prizes. Infrastructure has been established to provide ENS subnames to participants during ETHGlobal, in collaboration with the Public Goods Working Group.
ENS Labs hosted an offsite event and has sent members to BUIDL Asia and ETH Bucharest to mentor developers and deliver keynote presentations.
Technological developments include coordinated efforts to improve library support for gasless DNSSEC and offchain names using Go-ENS. A significant update to app.ens.domains now offers instant loading of subnames. Google is supporting ENS name searches, and Basescan, an L2 block explorer, has incorporated ENS lookups. Additionally, ENS Labs has been addressing various other areas, including ongoing bug fixes for their Manager App, layer 2 research, and the development of next-generation extended DNS resolvers to simplify text record integration for ENS names.
—
Mattis, introduced ENS-Auth, a system designed for identity and access management needs. Their approach involves minting and wrapping a subdomain named ‘groups’ under an ENS domain, then integrating it with the ensauth contract. This allows for efficient onboarding to a group management system, making it ideal for use within any onchain organization. Their onchain app allows for the creation, assignment, and management of groups and users. Further technical details, go to their GitHub repository. A video demonstration is available here. For any questions, reach out to Mattis J. Deisen directly via LinkedIn.
—
Arr00 presented WNS.vote, a novel voting platform with a focus on sybil-resistant quadratic voting mechanisms. It features an onchain registry that allows each individual to validate one ENS through WorldCoin’s unique identity verification process, which scans the user’s eyeball. This method ensures that each vote is cast by a distinct human being, thereby improving the integrity of the voting process. For more, visit the ETHGlobal site for a demonstration.
—
GovScore is an onchain scoring system developed by Onchain Clarity Co. to encourage a culture of accountability. The system awards points based on specific criteria, including setting ENS records. By incentivizing delegates to set their records through its scoring mechanism — accounting for 2 out of a total possible 10 points — GovScore promotes a transparent ecosystem where delegates are identifiable, and their actions are easily referenced. Transparency improves the health of the DAO ecosystem and serves as a basis for accountability. Additionally, GovScore takes into account voting history and the distribution of voting power to foster consistent and diverse representation in the decision-making process.
—
Presented by @clowes.eth, ETH Tools offers a suite of resources to enhance the developer experience on Ethereum. Their website, provides a range of tools designed to optimize blockchain interactions for developers. Features include the ability to sign messages, generate ENS hashes, resolve text, and a comprehensive ENS Whois service.
—
Brantly.eth presented updates on the Ethereum Follow Protocol (EFP), an onchain social graph protocol for Ethereum. Despite recent challenges, including team departures, EFP is progressing with assistance from Scope Lift. A Delaware non-profit corporation has been formed with a board of directors, and both the protocol’s architecture and manager app have been designed. Smart contracts are in place, and the MVP features for launch are set. EFP has secured 55 launch partners and is now preparing for its testnet release. EFP are actively hiring. Details available here.
—
The Public Goods Working Group supports the greater Ethereum ecosystem by identfying and funding open-source development.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Thursdays · 5:00 - 5:45pm UTC
Term 5 Public Goods Stewards:
—
Eduardo, a Term 5 Public Goods steward, recently delivered a presentation at ETHGuatemala, which is a recipient of the ENS Public Goods Grant. He provided an introduction to ENS in Spanish to an audience of 200 viewers.
—
The Token Engineering Academy (TEA), a Public Goods grantee, provided updates on its education initiative, engaging over 3700 students with more than 1000 exams passed. They are currently inviting learners to join their upcoming cohort from April 25 to July 2024, focusing on building skill sets in token engineering. Additionally, TEA offers a $10k fellowship grant, awarded through a voting mechanism, to support dedicated students. More information about their TE Track at EthCC 2024, taking place on July 10, can be found in Kaidlyne Neukam’s Medium post.
—
Simone Staffa from ETHRome, organized the first Web3 Hackathon in Italy last October. Building on this success, another event is slated for this year. The event is scheduled for October 4-6, 2024, in Rome, Italy, and will focus on tracks related to Privacy and Account Abstraction. To view quantitative results from last year’s event, Simone prepared slides for review. Potential sponsors interested in participating in the event can view more information about the event here.
—
Corina @snowdot presented Dhive, a governance data hub that is focused on indexing the Ethereum ecosystem and providing seeds to index across various chains and organizations, aiming to offer a holistic view of onchain governance.
—
The Public Goods Working Group launched a Perpetual Bounty program to inspire open-source development of infrastructure, tools, and resources that improve the adoption of Ethereum and web3 overall. A grant pool of $5,000 USDC is available to developers who are working on notable projects. The Working Group suggested builder dieas such as developing Warpcast Frames that highlight public goods projects, decentralized identity verification, and decentralized web hosting services.
—
ENS DAO offers several resources for understanding and participating in its ecosystem.
ENS DAO Basics: Details the ENS DAO, including voting and governance.
Support Docs: Provides guidance on registration, renewals, and development aspects.
Governance Docs: Offers additional insights into governance structure.
ENS Agora: Governance hub for proposal review and voting.
Give Feedback: Feedback platform where users share input to improve ENS.
ENS Repository: The ENS Protocol’s main Github Repository.
–
Thank you very much for reading! Goodbye. 👋
Newsletter Roundup (tl;dr):
ENS Labs Update: ENS Anniversary, Box Domains Integration, USPTO Petition,
Community Updates: Privacy-preserving names on Base
Meta-Governance: Active Voting Period, Q1 Review
Ecosystem: Updates, ENSIP forum, Project Highlights
Public Goods: Small Grants Results, Large Grants presentations
Welcome to the ENS DAO Newsletter:
New editions — published bi-weekly (Tuesday)
Previous editions are archived on the ENS DAO Archive.
New proposals are broadcasted to Telegram.
ENS DAO Dashboard is now available for public review.
Submit feedback — tell us what to feature!
—
Refer to ENS DAO Calendar for ENS DAO working group calls and other events.
Calendar: Public Access / Access with Gmail
—
The Term 5 Dashboard, managed by the Meta-Governance Working Group, provides updated summaries of DAO governance and initiatives. Regularly check it for the latest developments.
Proposal | Type | Discussion | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
Upgrade DNSSEC support | Executable | ||
Commence Streams for Service Providers | Executable | ||
Determine ENS Labs’ next steps in eth.link litigation | Social | ||
Funding Request: Meta-Governance Working Group (1H) | Social | ||
Funding Request: Public Goods Working Group (1H) | Social | ||
Funding Transfer: Public Goods Working Group (1H) | Executable | ||
Enable Self-Funding for the Endowment | Executable | ||
Security Council | Social | ||
ENS Steward Vesting Proposal | Social | ||
Roles Modifier V2 Migration | Executable | Pending |
Note: A minimum of 100k $ENS is required to submit executable proposals. Once a proposal gains momentum, the stewards will prioritize it for a vote during the designated voting window. See our Governance Docs for more information. To view the real-time distribution of voting power among delegates, visit votingpower.xyz.
—
@AvsA outlined a Governance Distribution Program in an effort to increase the $ENS voting supply. It details a strategy for distributing ENS tokens to DAO members — review the temp-check here. — 03.19.24
—
In April 2024, the ENS Protocol registered 48k new .eth domains, bringing the total to 2.1 million. The protocol generated revenue of $1.4 million during this period, all of which was allocated to the ENS DAO. The number of Ethereum account holders with at least one ENS name increased by 44.5k, totaling 877k. There were 42.3k primary ENS names set, making the overall count 833k. Additionally, 9.3k new avatar records were created, reaching a cumulative total of 169k. — 1
—
ENS announced several significant improvements aimed at enhancing the functionality and user experience of their platform. These updates include everything from a redesigned website to advanced security measures, reflecting ENS’s commitment to providing robust and user-friendly web3 infrastructure.
Here’s a summary of the key highlights from the update:
New Documentation Site: A revamped documentation site with added event videos.
Gasless DNSSEC Support: Enhanced support for importing DNS names without gas fees, with a streamlined offchain process.
Website Redesign: Updates to the ENS domain website, improving visual elements like fonts and icons.
Search Function Improvements: Case-insensitive search capabilities and removal of risky autocomplete features.
Testing Infrastructure: Transition from Cypress to Playwright for better efficiency in end-to-end testing.
Web3 Starter Kit: Introduction of a Web3 starter kit using Next.js for easier project setups.
Security and Quality of Life Enhancements: Multiple updates to improve user experience and security across the platform.
For more information, you can view the full update here. — 04.17.24
—
Box Domains and ENS have announced a partnership, integrating .box domains into the ENS ecosystem. Box Domains is the first Top-Level Domain registrar to be integrated alongside .eth on the ENS Manager App. This collaboration allows users to explore and register .box names through the ENS Manager App, alongside .eth names. The integration represents a step towards blending Web2 familiarity with Web3 innovation, offering users the ability to tokenize Web2 domains and fully own their .box names as NFTs, which are ready for website and email use. Read more details about the partnership on the ENS Blog. — 04.23.24
—
ENS has informed its stance on a patent obtained by Unstoppable Domains (UD) for technology originally developed as open-source by ENS Labs. ENS has petitioned the USPTO to challenge the validity of the patent, as it believes UD’s patent grab contradicts its ethos and disrupts the foundations of Web3 and the open internet. ENS highlights that UD has applied for several other patents for basic technologies, threatening decentralization and public benefit. ENS is committed to ensuring that essential web functions remain free and unrestricted, and it is transparent in its efforts to defend a vision of the internet that is open and innovative for everyone. — 05.02.24
—
Luc.eth, developer relations at ENS Labs, has announced a series of updates to ccip.tools. The updates aim to enhance user experience and functionality on the platform. Users can explore the new features, including Holesky support, improved transaction history, updated URLs on previously deployed Resolvers, and an upgraded Wagmi feature. Visit ccip.tools to learn more and experience these updates firsthand. — 05.02.24
—
ENS is celebrating its 7th anniversary on May 4th, 2024, and to commemorate this milestone, it has released a special NFT on Zora via Base. This unique NFT, available for minting at 0.0007 ETH, serves as a piece of the future, aligning with the theme, “May the address be with you!” to celebrate ENS’s seventh year. Over 29k NFTs have been minted at the time of this writing. Have a look at the NFT here. — 05.03.24
—
EthCC has announced Makoto Inoue from ENS Labs as one of its speakers for the event, which will be held in Brussels from July 8-11, 2024. Makoto will be speaking on the track focused on Rollups and Scaling Solutions. — 05.03.24
—
—
Participate in improving the ENS Ecosystem! Provide feedback on Canny, where members of ENS Labs and Working Group stewards will work to address your submissions. The ENS community can submit feedback in three main categories: Feature Requests, Integrations, and Bug Reports. You can also participate by upvoting or commenting on existing submissions. We’re listening to the community, send your feedback on Canny now.
—
Share updates on projects developing ENS for consideration for inclusion in the newsletter. Submit contributions and describe at least one nifty feature about your project for potential inclusion in the newsletter. Send your contributions here.
—
Kiwi News is a decentralized news platform, akin to Hacker News, focusing on crypto tech, products, and culture. The platform has 2,000 monthly readers and 120 curators, with user profiles built on top of ENS. The news feed can be accessed at news.kiwistand.com, while individual profiles, such as news.kiwistand.com/macbudkowski.eth, provide insights into specific users. — 04.23.24
—
Uniswap integrated ENS subnames with the uni.eth name, and in just two months, over 500,000 usernames have been claimed. This highlights the rapid adoption of this decentralized identity feature.eb3 identities using the Uniswap domain. — 04.24.24
—
ENS DAO Ecosystem stewrad, Limes.eth, delivered their ENS Roundup, the comprehensive bi-weekly digest of ENS ecosystem news. It includes updates on various fronts: from the ENS blog and web enhancements to app integrations featuring Box Domains powered by 3dns_inc. Highlights encompass significant milestones such as @Uniswap’s registration of 450,000 uni.eth subnames, Onthisxyz’s Shortcut discovery page named by ENS domains, and Kraken’s integration of ENS. Watch the round up here. - 04.24.24
—
Fluidkey has announced its transition to beta on the Base blockchain, offering privacy-preserving ENS names. The platform has generated over 40,000 such addresses so far and opened beta access for 48 hours. Base, the most requested chain since Fluidkey’s launch, is now their default. Fluidkey is supported by partners like Safe, ENS, and Privy, and is focused on enhancing onchain privacy without compromising user experience. Claim your privacy-preserving ENS name here. — 04.25.24
—
The Giveth Builders Quadratic Funding round concluded with a $20,000 DAI matching pool sponsored by the Public Goods Working Group on the OP Mainnet. The round, facilitated by Giveth, ran from March 25th to April 8th, 2024, receiving 412 donations from 134 donors, totaling $7,503 USD. Donations were made in various tokens across several networks, supporting 34 projects focused on building public goods. Eligible donations required a Gitcoin passport score of 5 or more and a minimum value of $0.90 USD. Recirculated and sybil-related donations were disqualified. A list of participating projects can be found here. For more details, read Giveth’s blog. — 04.26.24
—
Namespace has facilitated the integration of ENS into Tatum SDK, allowing developers to easily implement ENS functionality using an extension built by Namespace and published on Tatum’s open-source extension platform. This integration enables developers to register ENS domains, manage text records, and resolve addresses and names, promoting easier adoption of decentralized identities in blockchain applications. — 04.29.24
—
ENS and Talent Protocol have partnered to allow builders to enhance their Talent Passport with an ENS credential. This partnership enables users to boost their Builder Score with an ENS name, sync their ENS profile data easily, and introduces ENS-powered usernames, which are coming soon. The partnership allows users with an ENS domain as their primary name to automatically receive an ENS credential, boosting their Builder Score. Users can also sync their ENS profile data with their Talent Passport profile and use interoperable Web3 usernames. Talent Protocol encourages builders to create a Talent Passport, bring their reputation on-chain, and earn rewards as early adopters. Try it now. — 04.29.24
—
The latest portfolio dWebsite template by Webhash.eth, tailored for Web3 pioneers, has been launched on their website This template offers seamless integration for .eth and .box domains. — 04.29.24
—
Namespace has announced that all ENS Name owners can now issue (gift or sell) Subnames through Farcaster Frames on Warpcast. This exciting feature allows users to list any ENS Name on the app and let people mint through a frame, with ENS Subnames now available on Farcaster. The process involves first listing an ENS Name on the Namespace app, then generating a frame through the Widgets section to issue the Subnames.
To list an ENS Name on the Namespace app, owners should go to the Account tab, select the Manager tab, and choose the ENS Name they want to issue Subnames from. To generate a frame, owners should go to Widgets, click on Frames, choose a custom or default frame, select their ENS name, and share on Warpcast.
More detailed instructions on how to list an ENS name and generate a Farcaster frame can be found by clicking each respective link. — 04.30.24
—
The Ethereum Follow Protocol (EFP) has recently undergone significant updates, with the successful completion of hiring efforts leading to the formation of a strong team. To stay informed, follow @ethfollowpr on X for regular updates. Additionally, interested individuals can review the open-source code on their Github repository. —05.01.24
—
Eth.limo has announced a significant rebranding initiative, accompanied by the launch of a new website The new website showcases an updated design and user experience, aimed at enhancing accessibility and engagement for users. — 05.02.24
—
Nicnames announced the release of an ICANN-accredited registrar for .ETH domain registrations and renewals. This launch coincides with the 7th anniversary of ENS, marking a significant milestone. Key features include easy registration and renewal via hardware wallets like Ledger for added security. Metamask users can also manage domains directly in the wallet interface. Nicnames offers a custodial wallet creation service for newcomers to the crypto ecosystem, bridging the gap between Web2 and Web3 domains. Future plans include introducing autorenewals for .ETH domains and more integrations to improve user experience, with a focus on community feedback to shape decentralized web services. —05.04.24
—
Integrous is a Web3-focused project specializing in onboarding businesses and individuals with a user-friendly approach. They have developed a pilot ENS advertisement that emphasizes the simplicity of wallet transactions. The ENS advertisement showcases a user-friendly approach to onboarding businesses and individuals. The ad emphasizes the simplicity of wallet transactions using ENS. As of this writing, it has garnered 71,263 impressions and 1,653 engagements.
To watch the advertisement, visit: Integrous.eth on X.
—
Meta-Governance – @5pence.eth
ENS Ecosystem – @slobo.eth
Public Goods – @vegayp
DAO Secretary - @limes
The responsibilities of the Lead Stewards & Secretary are set out in Rule 9.8 and Rule 9.9 of the Working Group Rules.
—
Working Group | Time | Schedule | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 1pm UTC | Tuesday | |
![]() | 4pm UTC | Thursday | |
![]() | 5pm UTC | Thursday |
—
The Meta-Governance Working Group provides governance oversight and support for working group operations through DAO tooling and governance initiatives.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Tuesdays · 1:00 – 1:45pm UTC
Term 5 Meta-Governance Stewards:
—
The primary mission of ENS DAO is to govern the protocol and allocate resources in line with its constitution and objectives. However, changing economic dynamics make the DAO vulnerable to attacks aimed at draining its treasury. This proposal seeks approval from the ENS DAO to counter governance attacks by creating a veto role (veto.ensdao.eth), endowed with approximately 3.8 million $ENS delegated from ENS Labs. This role will be controlled by a multisig wallet pertaining to a trusted group to veto proposals that threaten the DAO’s integrity or violate its constitution. It also introduces a CANCEL role, assigned to the same multisig wallet.
Cast your vote: Snapshot
—
This proposal suggests implementing a vesting schedule for $ENS tokens distributed to stewards of all three ENS DAO Working Groups. The proposed vesting will occur over a 24-month period to align steward interests with the DAO’s long-term goals, with provisions for both current and retroactive vesting terms.
Cast your vote: Snapshot 1
—
—

Meta-Governance steward, estmcmxci.eth, presented the Q1 review encapsulating the initiatives, outcomes, and future trajectory of the ENS DAO Meta-Governance Working Group.
Implementation of Service Provider Streams
Drafting of ENS DAO Bylaws
Establishment of a $ENS Refund Policy
Introduction of a Steward Vesting Proposal
Implementation of Gasless Voting on Tally
Context of Meta-Governance responsibilities
Transition between steward terms
Ongoing efforts to empower stakeholders and ensure governance process integrity
Introduction of veto.ensdao.eth
Enablement of the CANCEL role
Continued discussions on compensation guidelines and governance distribution
The Meta-Governance Q1 Review serves as a roadmap for navigating the evolving landscape of ENS DAO governance, fostering collaboration, transparency, and innovation within the ecosystem.
—
The ENS DAO Q1 Spending Report offers a comprehensive overview of the financial activities and governance distribution within the ENS Working Groups during the first quarter of 2024. Divided into two sections—Spending and Governance Distribution—the report provides valuable insights into the utilization of resources and the allocation of governance tokens.
In Q1, the total spending across all working groups amounted to $664k USD, with meticulous breakdowns provided for each group.
Ecosystem: The Ecosystem working group expended $410,274 USDC during the quarter, covering various initiatives such as hackathons, grants, and other operational expenses related to events like ETH Denver and ETH London.
Meta-Governance: A total expenditure of 163,279 USDC and 3.42 ETH was reported by the Meta-Governance working group. This includes compensation for stewards, expenses related to DAO tooling, and payments to Lemma Solutions for drafting the ENS DAO Bylaws.
Public Goods: The Public Goods working group disbursed $79,851 USDC, primarily directed towards grants and event support for hackathons like ETH Denver and ETH Global London.
Each group’s spending is further dissected to provide a detailed understanding of where the funds were allocated, ranging from hackathon sponsorships to operational costs.
In addition to financial transactions, the Meta-Governance working group distributed 589 ENS tokens during Q1. These tokens were distributed to 13 recipients who accidentally sent ENS tokens to the ENS token contract, rendering their tokens inaccessible. This initiative aims to rectify inadvertent transactions and ensure fairness within the ecosystem.
The meticulous documentation of spending and governance distribution underscores the ENS DAO’s commitment to transparency and accountability. By providing a transparent overview of financial activities and governance token distributions, the report empowers stakeholders to make informed decisions and actively participate in the DAO’s operations and initiatives.
—
The Security Council proposal seeks to bolster the DAO’s security measures against cryptoeconomic threats by enabling the allow contract to initiate the cancel function on the timelock, preventing malicious exploitation of voting mechanisms. While addressing immediate concerns, some members, like Jengajojo and Spike, raise worries about the proposal’s impact on decentralization efforts. However, proponents like avsa.eth stress the necessity of thwarting malicious activities in the short term, emphasizing that the Security Council’s role is limited to canceling such actions. Discussions also revolve around token delegation within the DAO, urging members to contribute insights for further consideration, as transparency and long-term sustainability remain paramount in navigating these complexities.
—
Lemma Solutions has provided the Meta-Governance Working Group with its first draft of the Bylaws. The Working Group will review this submission and continue to deliberate on next steps.
—
@karpatkey presented an update on the Endowment, reporting a current value of $92.7 million.
Endowment Overview:
Portfolio Composition:
Ether: 76.0%
Stablecoins: 24.0%
Capital Utilization: 99.96%
Current APR: 4.48%
General Comments:
ZRM v2 Migration Proposal to be posted
—
Karpatkey’s upcoming proposal introduces the activation of Roles Modifier v2, enhancing treasury management operations with features like allowances and improved visualization. The revised permissions policy enables swapping actions on CoW Swap while removing obsolete actions and protocols, ensuring robustness and security within the DAO ecosystem. Read the proposal in full here.
—
The Ecosystem Working Group strengthens the ENS Protocol by facilitating developer relations, identifying and funding high-potential projects that enhance ENS, and bolstering support for ENS-aligned initiatives overall.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Thursdays · 4:00 – 5:00pm UTC
Term 5 Ecosystem Stewards:
—
The ENS Ecosystem Working Group sponsored the opening night event at FarCon
The Working Group will have a presence at ETHCC in Brussels, Belgium from July 8-11.
—
View the announcement on ENS Twitter.
You can now explore and register .box names through the ENS Manager App, alongside .eth names.
Greg has built a website (personal project) displaying incoming .box registrations since they are all public on-chain.
Ongoing maintenance and bug fixes.
Improving name validation and search functionality.
If you notice bugs, send them to the developer telegram group.
—
Gitcoin Round 20 has concluded, having offered a matching fund of 125k USDC for projects dedicated to advancing, expanding, or supporting the decentralized identity system centered around ENS. The round closed on May 7th, with approximately $7800 in donations already contributed across 39 projects, totaling 6700 donations. A dashboard displaying statistics for the round can be accessed through Gitcoin’s Explorer. Additionally, Limes.eth hosted a “Speed Donating” space to promote projects participating in the round. A recording of Spaces Held during this period is available here,
—
Matteoikari.eth has developed an AI-powered API tailored for converting text into smart contract code. This innovation enables users to write natural language commands for onchain transactions, with Brian AI acting as an intermediary, comprehending user input and facilitating the execution of transactions. The project has garnered recognition by winning several bounties in hackathons and has since evolved into a fully-fledged startup. Currently, the platform is in public beta, with the API readily accessible. Efforts are underway to integrate the service with ENS. Key functionalities include checking ENS availability, registering an ENS for a specified duration, verifying the expiration time of an ENS, renewing an ENS for a specified period, and assessing the associated cost of renewal or registration.
David Truong presented x23.ai, which utilizes Large Language Models (LLMs) to curate information on DAOS. This innovative initiative pulls information from various sources, including Github, forums, and more. Particularly noteworthy is the ENS-specific page titled “The ENS community” on x23.ai’s platform. Currently, the project covers 29 communities, allowing users to search across all these communities seamlessly. For further engagement, you can reach David Truong on Telegram: @daveytea.
—
@slobo.eth from Resolver Works presented a platform, utilized to educate students at Columbia Business School on minting NFTs on Arbitrum. These NFTs also grant ENS and are tradable on OpenSea. Additionally, they also initiated a project titled “Resolvers & Latency,” aimed at summarizing existing resolvers in ENS and their latency to obtain accurate performance statistics.
@thecap.eth from Namespace shared updates on Namespace, simplifying the integration and issuance of ENS Subnames to users within Web3. Recently, Namespace introduced a new feature allowing users to create Frames in Warpcast, enabling the issuance of subdomains through an intuitive UI. Additionally, @thecap.eth is actively enhancing subdomain creation Frames with more customization options and is planning to establish L2 infrastructure for issuing subdomains on Layer 2 solutions.
—
Premm.eth and Slobo.eth have initiated discussions regarding the establishment of a formal Ethereum Name Service Improvement Proposal (ENSIP) process. The primary objective of the ENSIP project is to standardize and provide high-quality documentation for ENS itself and the conventions built upon it. The project’s repository can be found on GitHub under unruggable-labs/ENSIPS. One notable document within the repository is ensip-D10-001.md. An idea proposed is to discuss ENSIPs on a monthly cadence during the Ecosystem calls. For further information or engagement, Premm.eth can be reached on social media platforms such as X or Telegram under the handle @nxt3d.
—
The Public Goods Working Group supports the greater Ethereum ecosystem by identfying and funding open-source development.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Thursdays · 5:00 - 5:45pm UTC
Term 5 Public Goods Stewards:
—
DAppNode, led by Lanski and Marc, offers free open-source software for running blockchain nodes without technical expertise. The platform provides a user-friendly UI for installing nodes like Bitcoin and Zcash. It promotes decentralization and encourages individuals to run their own nodes.
To address Miner Extractable Value (MEV) challenges, DAppNode introduced Smooth, which distributes MEV rewards more equitably among solo stakers. A statistics page shows higher returns for those in Smooth.
For installation, refer to DAppNode’s Installation Overview. The project is seeking large validators like Lido to join Smooth and share rewards. DAppNode is also developing tech v2, focusing on restaking protocols, multi-unsubscribe features, and enhancements in smart contracts and oracles.
DAppNode has integrated Optimism nodes and plans to add zkEVM and other Layer 2 solutions. @Coltron.eth praised the team’s commitment to large grants and efforts.
—
Voting for ENS Small Grants concluded, distributing 7.5 ETH to projects that support the Web3 ecosystem. The prize breakdown is as follows: 3 ETH for first place, 2 ETH for second, and 1 ETH for third. Projects in the top ten receive 0.25 ETH each. Winnings will be awarded shortly. — 05.05.24
—
This perpetual PG bounty seeks innovative projects aligning with ENS’s ethos as a public good, aiming to enrich the Ethereum ecosystem. Developers are invited to propose solutions focusing on decentralization, security, user empowerment, adoption, and innovation, with a chance to win a bounty pot of 5,000 USDC. Submit your project here.
—
ENS DAO offers several resources for understanding and participating in its ecosystem.
ENS DAO Basics: Details the ENS DAO, including voting and governance.
Support Docs: Provides guidance on registration, renewals, and development aspects.
Governance Docs: Offers additional insights into governance structure.
ENS Agora: Governance hub for proposal review and voting.
Give Feedback: Feedback platform where users share input to improve ENS.
ENS Repository: The ENS Protocol’s main Github Repository.
–
Thank you very much for reading! Goodbye. 👋


Newsletter Roundup (tl;dr):
ENS Labs Update: ENS Web Update, Cornell Blockchain Conference
Community Updates: ETH Limo Q1 Update, Steward Lecture @ Columbia Biz
Meta-Governance: Voting Period Results, Addressing Attack Vectors
Ecosystem: Q1 Grants Summary, ENS Identity Round
Public Goods: Giveth Builders Round Update
Welcome to the ENS DAO Newsletter:
New editions — published bi-weekly (Tuesday)
Previous editions are archived on the ENS DAO Archive.
New proposals are broadcasted to Telegram.
ENS DAO Dashboard is now available for public review.
Submit feedback — tell us what to feature!
—
Refer to ENS DAO Calendar for ENS DAO working group calls and other events.
Calendar: Public Access / Access with Gmail
—
The Term 5 Dashboard, managed by the Meta-Governance Working Group, provides updated summaries of DAO governance and initiatives. Regularly check it for the latest developments.
Proposal | Type | Discussion | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
Upgrade DNSSEC support | Executable | ||
Commence Streams for Service Providers | Executable | ||
Determine ENS Labs’ next steps in eth.link litigation | Social |
Note: A minimum of 100k $ENS is required to submit executable proposals. Once a proposal gains momentum, the stewards will prioritize it for a vote during the designated voting window. See our Governance Docs for more information. To view the real-time distribution of voting power among delegates, visit votingpower.xyz.
—
@Avsa outlined a Governance Distribution Program in an effort to increase the $ENS voting supply. It details a strategy for distributing ENS tokens to DAO members — review the temp-check here. — 03.19.24
—
Avsa.eth proposed enabling a CANCEL function that would assign the role of canceller to a multisig controlled by a smart contract created by Nick.eth. This function allows a select council of trusted DAO participants to exercise a large number of ‘no’ votes, enabling them to veto proposals that risk the integrity of the ENS DAO — review the temp-check here. — 04.12.24
—
In March 2024, the ENS Protocol registered 21k new .eth domains, bringing the total to 2.1 million. The protocol generated revenue of $1.3 million during this period, all of which was allocated to the ENS DAO. The number of Ethereum account holders with at least one ENS name increased by 18.3k, totaling 844k. There were 16.7k primary ENS names set, making the overall count 788k. Additionally, 3.9k new avatar records were created, reaching a cumulative total of 159k.
—
ENS announced several significant improvements aimed at enhancing the functionality and user experience of their platform. These updates include everything from a redesigned website to advanced security measures, reflecting ENS’s commitment to providing robust and user-friendly web3 infrastructure.
Here’s a summary of the key highlights from the update:
New Documentation Site: A revamped documentation site with added event videos.
Gasless DNSSEC Support: Enhanced support for importing DNS names without gas fees, with a streamlined offchain process.
Website Redesign: Updates to the ENS domain website, improving visual elements like fonts and icons.
Search Function Improvements: Case-insensitive search capabilities and removal of risky autocomplete features.
Testing Infrastructure: Transition from Cypress to Playwright for better efficiency in end-to-end testing.
Web3 Starter Kit: Introduction of a Web3 starter kit using Next.js for easier project setups.
Security and Quality of Life Enhancements: Multiple updates to improve user experience and security across the platform.
For more information, you can view the full update here. — 04.17.24
—
Luc.eth, Developer Relations at ENS Labs, announced the release of new documentation for Enstate, an innovative self-hostable ENS API. Enstate is engineered to provide resolution services and more at remarkable speeds for the ENS ecosystem. These documents aim to assist developers in integrating and utilizing the API for various applications, facilitating enhanced interaction with the Ethereum Name Service.
Read the documentation here. — 04.17.24
—
The ENS Labs support documentation was recently updated to provide guidance on using a .eth name in Farcaster, a “sufficiently decentralized” onchain social app. The documentation includes prerequisites and a step-by-step guide written by Dylan Meador (bdl.eth). It outlines a process to add your ENS name to your Farcaster profile, highlighting four key steps designed to ensure simplicity and clarity.
Read the guide here. — 04.18.24
—
Cornell Blockchain, a student organization of Cornell University, is hosting a panel on Web3 growth at the Cornell Blockchain Conference slated for April 26, 2024. The panel features several industry professionals including Marta Cura from ENS Labs. They will share insights on what it takes from a business development and marketing perspective to build ventures for billions. Participants can claim their tickets here. — 04.19.24
—
Talent Protocol and ENS are hosting a Builders Brunch on Friday, May 3rd, at PoolsideCo. The event is designed for networking and enjoying great food. Attendees are encouraged to RSVP for this gathering where developers and enthusiasts can connect. — 04.22.24
—
ENS Radio: Fluidkey and Onchain Privacy — 04.10.24
ENS Radio: Zondax — 04.17.24
Galaxy: Crypto UX Promises and Pitfalls with Nick Johnson — 04.17.24
OSPN: How NFTs allow for True Ownership with Evan Moyer — 04.19.24
—
Participate in improving the ENS Ecosystem! Provide feedback on Canny, where members of ENS Labs and Working Group stewards will work to address your submissions. The ENS community can submit feedback in three main categories: Feature Requests, Integrations, and Bug Reports. You can also participate by upvoting or commenting on existing submissions. We’re listening to the community, send your feedback on Canny now.
—
Uniswap Labs recently announced that over 400,000 uni.eth usernames have been claimed. Users can claim their uni.eth subname for free on the Uniswap Mobile app. — 04.09.24
—
Onthis.xyz launched a dedicated search page for shortcuts designed to make it easier for users to find no-code executable on-chain actions. Many of these shortcuts are named via ENS. — 04.11.24
—
Eth.limo has introduced several updates, focusing on a redesigned architecture, support for multiple RPC providers, and a more efficient reverse proxy structure. The updated service includes new features like full end-to-end IPv6 and IPFS CDN with _rewrites file support. Other improvements cover improved caching, easier configuration with dynamic reloads, and custom domain routing logic.
Read the update in full here. — 04.12.24
—
Hidayath.eth from WebHash announced the introduction of the Farcaster Block. This new feature allows ENS names to not only function as addresses but also serves as a gateway to showcase a Farcaster feed directly into a dWebsite. — 04.12.24
—
The article by Dragonite.eth explores the Pokémon ENS collection, which has become popular within the Web3 community. The piece discusses the collection’s origins, which began with minting Pokémon-themed names on the Ethereum blockchain, and highlights its growing momentum in 2023. It touches on the community infrastructure, such as Discord and Twitter, and notes some of the significant sales and collaborative projects. The article provides an overview of the community-driven efforts and connections with notable Web3 personalities. — 04.14.24
—
The Dapp List, a platform for Web3 projects, recently awarded XP to everyone who shared their ENS Name in a recent post. Users can claim their XP drop by heading to the website, connecting their wallet, and clicking on the XP Drop. This is a concerted effort by the Dapp List team to offer points to its core user base. — 04.15.24
—
Kraken, a prominent cryptocurrency exchange, introduced a wallet that includes support for ENS names. This integration allows users to utilize their ENS domains within Kraken’s platform, enhancing the user experience by streamlining transactions with easily recognizable blockchain domain names. — 04.17.24
—
Brian is a tool that facilitates various functions to administer ENS names, including registration, renewal, availability checks, expiration tracking, and setting primary names for ENS domains. It leverages a non-custodial AI assistant capable of executing multiple onchain transactions efficiently. Designed to support batch operations, the tool optimizes handling multiple ENS domains simultaneously, enhancing the user experience within the ENS community. — 04.17.24
—

Mely.eth posted an illustration of the newly formed “Fellowship of ENS,” a group pledged to safeguard ENS DAO against governance attacks. The image depicts a few characters, each representing prominent members of the ENS community who have taken the pledge to protect the DAO. These individuals are given a delegate veto mechanism through which they can exercise their power to cast decisive “no” votes against proposals that might jeopardize the integrity of the ENS DAO. This move ensures a more secure and protected governance structure, with a select group of trusted DAO participants actively committed to upholding the ENS constitution and defending against any harmful actions or governance attacks. — 04.17.24
—
Mailchain, a provider of Web3 email services, emphasizes the importance of incorporating Web3 identities into growth strategies. In the article, they underscore the potential of Web3 identities to vastly enhance the flexibility, creativity, and human element of our digital interactions. Mailchain highlights that an ENS domain is more than just a digital address—it’s a form of personal expression.
Read the article here. — 04.18.24
—
Usesrs on Console, an onchain community platform, can now utilize their ENS domains as usernames within Console Live Audio Rooms. — 04.18.24
—
Slobo.eth, an ENS DAO Ecosystem Steward, recently gave a guest lecture at Columbia University’s business school. He provided an onchain experience for over 50 students, allowing them to mint their own Layer 2 ENS subnames using Namestone. The students could create an onchain name, update text records, and trade names on Opensea. Gas fees were near zero, thanks to storage on Arbitrum. This initiative served as an engaging introduction to ENS technology and its potential applications, giving students a hands-on experience with blockchain concepts. — 04.18.24
—
Nick.eth shared an ENS advertising jingle developed using Suno AI. Listen to it here. — 04.19.24
—
Liubenben.eth, an ENS Delegate, recently provided a Mandarin Chinese translation of ENS Labs’ weekly ecosystem updates. Read the translation here. — 04.20.24
—
Address.Vision, created by portdev.eth, allows users to view Ethereum addresses or ENS names and their details in a streamlined interface. The platform provides insights into token balances, NFTs, and other Ethereum-related data across different chains like Base, Ethereum, Polygon, and Optimism. The site shows detailed breakdowns of balances, token types, and QR codes for easy sharing, showcasing a modern and visually appealing interface. The site also features custom address unfurls, allowing for convenient tracking and visualization of Ethereum addresses. — 04.20.24
—
Raffy.eth has developed CCIPRewriter.sol, which allows users to customize ENS names and adjust off-chain gateways. The “ccipr.eth” ENS suffix can be added to any ENS name to replace its off-chain gateway, offering benefits for privacy and debugging. To view a demonstration of the CCIPRewriter tool, including its key components like the name input field, the replacement endpoint, and the base name, follow this link. — 04.21.24
—
Premm.eth has introduced a new blog discussing the concept of an AI URI, a method to create a uniform resource identifier for AI-generated content. The concept can be applied to various contexts, such as embedding in emails or text messages, linking AI-generated content on ENS, or as part of an existing standard like NFTs. This approach can offer a semantic link between AI prompts and URLs, allowing the AI to interpret and render the intended content. The blog explores the potential use cases of AI URIs in the context of evolving technologies and data representation. — 04.22.24
—
Meta-Governance – @5pence.eth
ENS Ecosystem – @slobo.eth
Public Goods – @vegayp
DAO Secretary - @limes
The responsibilities of the Lead Stewards & Secretary are set out in Rule 9.8 and Rule 9.9 of the Working Group Rules.
—
Working Group | Time | Schedule | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 1pm UTC | Tuesday |
—
The Meta-Governance Working Group provides governance oversight and support for working group operations through DAO tooling and governance initiatives.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Tuesdays · 1:00 – 1:45pm UTC
Term 5 Meta-Governance Stewards:
—
The first proposal, [EP 5.5], related to the ENS Public Goods Working Group Term 5 for Q1/Q2, sought funding in accordance with the Working Group Rules. It resulted in the successful execution of the proposal, with the transfer of 450.3k USDC from the designated wallet to the Public Goods working group multi sig.
The second proposal, [EP 5.6], aimed to enable self-funding for the Endowment to ensure the continuation of operations. This included measures for financing the Endowment as well as reimbursement to the Meta-Governance Working Group for interim funding provided during January and February. The outcome was the successful execution of the proposal, with the transaction processed through the specified wallet.
For more details, visit the Voting Period Bulletin.
—
Corina Pascu from Dhive has presented their initiative as a Small Grants applicant and is seeking support. Dhive is positioned as a data hub, aiming to create a single, accessible location for both onchain and offchain data. They are planning to launch their service in June. Additionally, Dhive intends to establish a trusted credentials environment and implement a notification system to facilitate direct communication from the DAO to users. More about their project can be found on their website at dhive.io.
—
Nick.eth introduced a smart contract ‘delegate’ labeled veto.ensdao.eth with 3.8M delegated tokens. This measure is a part of a safeguarding strategy to minimize governance attack vectors, which have been recognized as a significant threat to DAOs.
A key measure implemented is a contract that allows a select group of trusted DAO participants to veto proposals that may pose a risk to the DAO. This veto power is backed by a substantial delegation of ENS tokens from Labs to ensure it has enough weight to be effective. However, this veto can only be exercised by individuals granted special permission and who have agreed to a pledge that they will only use it to prevent governance attacks or actions that would breach the ENS constitution.
Looking forward, there is a proposal to establish a CANCEL role within the DAO, controlled by a multisig, to provide a balance of power and ensure any use of such a decisive action would be seriously considered and used only to safeguard the DAO.
—
@karpatkey, in collaboration with @Steakhouse, has provided the latest insights into the DAO’s endowment, which is currently valued at $91.5 million.
Endowment Overview:
Portfolio Composition:
Ether: 75.7%
Stablecoins: 24.3%
Capital Utilization: 99.9%
Current APR: 5.13%
Operational Moves:
Claimed rewards and converted to ETH
General Comments:
Executed endowment self-funding
Ethereum for March fees is now available
—
The March Endowment report is now available on Karpatkey’s Website. This report provides a detailed overview of the endowment’s finances and allocations. A high-level overview is made available below for reader’s convenience:
Balance Overview:
Total funds in the endowment: $104,202,838
Capital utilization: 99.8%
Monthly DeFi results: $443,017
Annual Percentage Yield (APY): 5.27%
Review the full report prepared by prepared by Karpatkey here.
—
Financial Overview:
Revenue > Cash Burn, Runway: 211 months
Revenues: $3.2M (up from $2.4M last month, and $3.1M last year)
Cash inflow: $1.3M (down from $1.5M last month, and from $1.7M last year), exceeding cash burn by 1.97 times
Normalized Cash Burn: $0.7M, with Reserves now at $140M (ETH: $108M, USDC: $32M)
Total Endowment: $95.8M, with P&L of $6.2M, primarily from ETH mark-to-market gains
Review the full report prepared by @Steakhouse here.
—
The Ecosystem Working Group strengthens the ENS Protocol by facilitating developer relations, identifying and funding high-potential projects that enhance ENS, and bolstering support for ENS-aligned initiatives overall.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Thursdays · 4:00 – 5:00pm UTC
Term 5 Ecosystem Stewards:
—
ENS Ecosystem grants support the development and improvement of the ENS protocol and ecosystem, with a focus on technical projects. These grants are awarded retroactively based on demonstrated value and are intended to foster innovation within the ENS community. The following is a summary of projects that have been awarded Ecosystem Grants in Q1:
Project | Description | Grant (USDC) |
|---|---|---|
An API for resolving and reverse-resolving ENS names and addresses. | $10,000 | |
Service for retrieving ENS text records, avatars, and NFTs via a simple API. | $10,000 | |
Privacy-preserving ENS project for funds management and transactions. | $25,000 | |
Tool for creating “Shortcuts” for on-chain actions using ENS. | $25,000 | |
A block explorer providing insights into Ethereum’s consensus and execution layers. |
—
ENS is set to sponsor the opening night at FarCon from May 2-5 in Venice Beach, California. There has been an extension for ticket availability provided by Warpcast. Additionally, ENS will be present at EthCCfrom July 8-11 in Brussels, Belgium.
—
ENS Labs updates its documentation weekly, with input from both internal and external contributors. Feedback is encouraged via the dedicated Telegram channel. Continuous front-end updates are posted on the ENS Blog, including the April 2024 update. Developers can use the enstate.rs API to set up ENS services or learn more about the platform.
The Graph is transitioning to a decentralized network, set for completion by mid-June. ENS Labs is preparing for this, with no immediate action required. Additionally, ENS Labs is conducting long-term research into Layer 2 solutions for better scalability and collaborating with teams integrating ENS into their projects.
—
Subname Frame on Warpcast
@Cap.eth introduced a novel Farcaster frame through Warpcast, enabling users to mint a free ENS Subname from GotFramed.eth. This frame is gasless and fully resolvable, incorporating the user’s address record, with more ENS-themed enhancements planned for release.
—
ENS Round-up Series
@limes.eth introduced an ENS Round-up series which aims to provide updates in a visual format for those who prefer video content. The initiative is set to deliver new content bi-weekly.
—
Dart Implementation
Peter Anyaogu has developed a Dart implementation of ENSIP-15, the ENS Name Normalization Standard, and the normalization library is now accessible as a Dart package.
—
Browser Extenstions
@maintainer.eth showcased a dashboard/Chrome Extension for accessing various ENS, Web3, Tax, and more information and applications, sparking a conversation about enhancing the accessibility of this extension/dashboard.
—
AI Agents
@prem published a blog post titled “Introducing ai:” on Medium, discussing the integration of AI prompts into browsers.
—
EVM Chains
Griff Green led a discussion about EIP155 Namespace for EVM Chains and addressed the use of CAIP-10 for registering chain-specific addresses within ENS. The goal is to start registering EOAs as EOAs rather than tied to a specific chain. There’s an initiative to merge CAIP69 into CAIP10 to facilitate the specification of EOA wallets. Further context is provided by comparing ERC-4337 and EIP-3074, highlighting the importance of understanding the nuances between different EIPs and ERCs as they relate to ENS and blockchain interoperability. The discussions and proposals are documented in ENS improvement proposals and GitHub repositories.
—
EP-10 funded Spruce’s community-run OpenID Connect (OIDC) Identity Provider Server. Integrated with Ethereum’s KZG ceremony, the $250,000 budget allocated $75,000 for community rewards, $175,000 for Spruce’s maintenance, and $70,000 for community projects. Part of this funding went to Davis Shaver’s WordPress work with SIWE + ENS names, with the rest designated for partnerships in the GG20 ENS Identity Round. For full details, check the complete review.
—
The Gitcoin Round 20 Review Period followed a successful two-week application phase. ENS is providing $100k USDC for matching, with a total of 71 applications submitted before the closure. The donation period is set to begin on April 23, and stewards are tasked with reviewing the applications to ensure they meet the required guidelines. Gitcoin utilizes quadratic funding for its grants program; additional information on quadratic funding can be found at wtfisqf.com.
—
The Public Goods Working Group supports the greater Ethereum ecosystem by identfying and funding open-source development.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Thursdays · 5:00 - 5:45pm UTC
Term 5 Public Goods Stewards:
—
The Giveth funding round has concluded, recording 412 donations and supporting 32 eligible projects with a $20,000 matching pool. There were 217 unique donors, contributing a total of $7503. Donations were made across various blockchain chains, and many projects were verified, with minimal concerns of dubious activities. A detailed analysis of the round will be available soon on the Giveth website, and top-donated projects will be invited for further engagement.
—
The Small Grants voting period is on hold due to technical issues encountered with the voting interface and token weight calculations. The problem with token value has been resolved, but a front-end fix is still pending. There is a recommendation to halt the voting on the ENS Grants page until the issue is resolved. The consensus is to wait until the front-end issues are addressed to resume voting. The delay has expedited front-end updates for a quicker resolution. The voting round is expected to restart with the submissions that have already been made.
—
MetaGo Project, presented by Eugene and Alex, received a $40k grant from MetaGov and DAOStar for research aimed at enhancing grant coordination. They hosted a summit on Web3 grants in Denver and are developing a common DAO standard, collaborating with various organizations like the Ethereum Foundation and Stellar. Current projects include creating a common standard for DAOs, improving grant program success metrics, and supporting grantee communities.
—
John Hoopes presented Astral.Global, focusing on the development of dApps that leverage geographic location. Astral Global provides open-source tools and infrastructure to facilitate the creation of such dapps. They offer Spatial Registries, which are onchain geospatial databases allowing the registration of geographic assets like points, lines, and polygons, with open access and upcoming privacy-preserving features. They also provide location Attestations for verifiable location claims of persons or devices, compatible with EAS and Astral’s spatial registries.
—
ENS DAO offers several resources for understanding and participating in its ecosystem.
ENS DAO Basics: Details the ENS DAO, including voting and governance.
Support Docs: Provides guidance on registration, renewals, and development aspects.
Governance Docs: Offers additional insights into governance structure.
ENS Agora: Governance hub for proposal review and voting.
Give Feedback: Feedback platform where users share input to improve ENS.
ENS Repository: The ENS Protocol’s main Github Repository.
–
Thank you very much for reading! Goodbye. 👋🏼


Newsletter Roundup (tl;dr)
ENS Labs Update: ENS Stats, ETHBucharest, BUIDLASIA
Community Updates: Integrations, Merchandise, Call for Feedback
Meta-Governance: Active Voting Period
Ecosystem: ENS Identity Round
Public Goods: Small Grants Round
Welcome to the ENS DAO Newsletter:
New editions — published bi-weekly (Tuesday)
Previous editions are archived on the ENS DAO Archive.
New proposals are broadcasted to Telegram.
ENS DAO Dashboard is now available for public review.
Submit feedback — tell us what to feature!
—
Calendar
Refer to ENS DAO Calendar for ENS DAO working group calls and other events.
Calendar: Public Access / Access with Gmail
—
The Term 5 Dashboard, managed by the Meta-Governance Working Group, provides updated summaries of DAO governance and initiatives. Regularly check it for the latest developments.
Proposal | Type | Discussion | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
Upgrade DNSSEC support | Executable | ||
Commence Streams for Service Providers | Executable | ||
Determine ENS Labs’ next steps in eth.link litigation | Social |
Note: A minimum of 100k $ENS is required to submit executable proposals. Once a proposal gains momentum, the stewards will prioritize it for a vote during the designated voting window. See our Governance Docs for more information. To view the real-time distribution of voting power among delegates, visit votingpower.xyz.
—
@AvsA outlined a Governance Distribution Program in an effort to increase the $ENS voting supply. It details a strategy for distributing ENS tokens to DAO members — review the temp-check here. — 03.19.24
—
In March 2024, the ENS Protocol registered 21k new .eth domains, bringing the total to 2.1 million. The protocol generated revenue of $1.3 million during this period, all of which was allocated to the ENS DAO. The number of Ethereum account holders with at least one ENS name increased by 18.3k, totaling 844k. There were 16.7k primary ENS names set, making the overall count 788k. Additionally, 3.9k new avatar records were created, reaching a cumulative total of 159k.
—
ENS Labs sponsored and participated in the inaugural ETH Bucharest event and hackathon in Romania, held from March 27 to March 30. Luc.eth, a member of the Developer Relations team at ENS Labs, assumed dual roles as both a speaker and a mentor. — 03.26.24
—
BUIDLASIA is a tech conference highlighting developments and key players in the industry. Matoken.eth, a Core Developer at ENS Labs, delivered a keynote presentation titled ‘ENS Beyond Web3,’ which delved into fundamental ENS concepts, explored use cases beyond the .eth TLD, such as cb.id and Gasless DNSSEC, and discussed the future of ENS, emphasizing their recent collaboration with GoDaddy.
Slides from the presentation can be found here. — 03.27.24
—
ETHSeoul is a 3 day hackathon held in South Korea. Matoken.eth was a featured speaker and judge at the event and hackathon, where they delivered an ENS integration workshop. The workshop covered ENS fundamental concepts, how to integrate ENS into onchain apps, and its Thorin Design System.
Slides from the presenation can be found here. — 03.30.24
—
In an interview conducted by Tereza Bízková via HackerNoon, Khori Whittaker, Executive Director at ENS Labs, shared their views on decentralized identity, onchain social platforms, and the potential impact of ENS in reshaping online identity paradigms. The interview delved into the significance of decentralized social platforms and their potential to engage the next billion users.
Read the interview in full here — 04.02.24
—
ENS Radio: Ethereum Attestation Service — 03.27.24
ENS Radio: Giveth Quadratic Funding Round — 04.03.24
ENS Radio: Fluidkey and Onchain Privacy — 04.10.24
—
Participate in improving the ENS Ecosystem! Provide feedback on Canny, where members of ENS Labs and Working Group stewards will work to address your submissions. The ENS community can submit feedback in three main categories: Feature Requests, Integrations, and Bug Reports. You can also participate by upvoting or commenting on existing submissions. We’re listening to the community, send your feedback on Canny now.
—
The Public Goods Working Group partnered with Giveth for their Quadratic Funding Round. The round aimed to support public goods, specifically assisting grassroots developers and small projects with a notable impact in their fields, with $20,000 available on Optimism to match donations. Funding public goods strengthens the ecosystem, broadens the adoption of web3, and directly supports builders constructing open-source infrastructure on web3. The Donation Period closed on Monday, April 8th — donations will be distributed to participants soon afterwards. — 03.25.24
—
The Ecosystem Working Group has partnered with Gitcoin for their upcoming Grants Round. The ENS Identity Round offers a $100k matching pool to support projects developing decentralized identity on ENS. This round will support projects actively building on ENS. Any project that is contributing to the growth, enhancement, or support of the decentralized identity system around ENS is eligible. — 03.27.24
Round Details:
Submissions: April 2nd - April 16th
Round Period: April 23rd - May 7th
Apply here
—
Fluidkey announced platform enhancements integrating Privy, Safe, and ENS to improve privacy in blockchain transactions. With the latest update, users can now send and receive onchain assets without revealing their wallet addresses, thanks to the ENS integration, which enables them to utilize fkey.eth subnames and preserve fund privacy. Additionally, the login process has been streamlined, offering authentication via Farcaster, Google, or email powered by Privy for a smoother user experience. — 03.27.24
—
Basescan is a user interface that allows for searching and navigating various transactions, addresses, tokens, prices, and other onchain events on the Base Layer 2 blockchain. The blockchain explorer recently integrated support for ENS, which allows users to look up onchain activity with ENS Names. — 03.27.24
—
The Public Goods Working Group is distributing 7.5 ETH to eligible projects that benefit the Ethereum ecosystem. Projects eligible for the Public Goods small grants rounds have a broader scope that benefits the entire Ethereum or Web3 space. The voting period will conclude on April 11th, and rewards will be distributed soon thereafter. — 03.28.24
—
Blockful, a developer studio with a focus on building open-source infrastructure, recently delivered an ENS Workshop at BambaLabs, a co-working space for builders and creatives to meet and work together in the heart of Ipanema, Rio de Janeiro. — 03.28.24
—
General Magic, a Web3 Design & Development Studio, recently announced the ‘ENS Merch Shop,’ a dedicated space for purchasing ENS merchandise. The Merch Shop operates on a print-on-demand basis, offering a diverse selection of items and colors, and allows users to customize their apparel with their ENS name. Items available at the store include hats, mugs, t-shirts, and hoodies, with worldwide shipping options available.
Visit the ‘ENS Merch Shop’ here. — 04.02.24
—
Opepen, a generative art and PFP project founded by NFT artist Jack Butcher, which allows collectors to influence the evolution of the art pieces, now allows users to display their .eth addresses as usernames, enhancing the user experience by facilitating easier identification and interaction within the platform. — 04.06.24
—
Value Domain, a Japanese domain registrar, has integrated ENS name resolution functionality and Gasless DNSSEC for its DNS domains. This feature enables traditional DNS domains hosted on Value Domain to map to Ethereum wallet addresses using CCIP-Read (EIP-3668) for retrieving and verifying DNS records during resolution. — 04.06.24
—
Bankless Academy, an interactive and free-to-access web3 education platform, published a user-friendly guide that assists newcomers in registering their first ENS name. The guide covers concepts such as using ENS as a web3 passport and ENS names as ERC-721 tokens. It also explains how to create an onchain profile by setting text records and includes a step-by-step walkthrough on registering an ENS name.
Read the guide in full here. — 04.08.24
—
Magiziz.eth, a developer from Rainbow, developed a Warpcast frame designed to help ENS name users check their .eth expiration date. It prompts users to enter their ENS domain to check its expiration date. It informs of the remaining time before the domain expires and provides a direct link for renewal. — 04.08.24
—
thecap.eth of Namespace created a Warpcast frame that allows users to mint a free ENS Subname from GotFramed.eth. It provides a dual functionality: firstly, it sets up the user’s address record automatically; secondly, it integrates the user’s Farcaster profile picture into a specially designed frame. — 04.08.24
—
Limes.eth introduced “ENS Roundup”, a comprehensive bi-weekly digest that aggregates the latest developments within the ENS ecosystem. The roundup is a concerted effort to keep the community informed and engaged with developments across various facets of the ecosystem, including governance decisions, grant initiatives, and integrations. — 04.08.24
—
Meta-Governance – @5pence.eth
ENS Ecosystem – @slobo.eth
Public Goods – @vegayp
DAO Secretary - @limes
The responsibilities of the Lead Stewards & Secretary are set out in Rule 9.8 and Rule 9.9 of the Working Group Rules.
—
Working Group | Time | Schedule | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 1pm UTC | Tuesday |
—
The Meta-Governance Working Group provides governance oversight and support for working group operations through DAO tooling and governance initiatives.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Tuesdays · 1:00 – 1:45pm UTC
Term 5 Meta-Governance Stewards:
—
In accordance with Rule 10.1 of the Working Group Rules, the Pubic Goods Working Group have put forth an executable proposal detailing a funding request. If successful, a transfer of 450.3k USDC and 21.5 ETH will be initiated from wallet.ensdao.eth to the Public Goods working group.
Cast your vote on Tally.
—
Regular and routine management of the Endowment is necessary to continue operations. This executable proposal details a measure to finance the Endowment, as well as a reimbursement for interim funding provided from the Meta-Governance Multi-sig to settle Endowment fees during the months of January and February. The payload will be executed by wallet.ensdao.eth to create the aforementioned allowance and reimbursement.
Cast your vote on Tally.
—
—
Aseem Sood demonstrated a fully onchain Paymaster System designed for subsidized voting. This system allows wallets to have their gas costs to be subsidized, effectively addressing the cost prohibitive onchain transactions that often serve as a barrier to voting. The solution employs account abstraction in conjunction with smart wallets, eliminating the need for centralized services. The only requirement for maintenance is the periodic refilling of the Paymaster. The system is designed to cover costs only for specific function calls and includes a feature to limit expenses by only paying for gas when it falls below a certain threshold.
View the Repository here.
—
Tally introduced gasless voting for ENS Delegates, allowing them to vote on proposals without incurring gas fees and making participation in the ENS DAO less cost-prohibitive. The update specifies that delegates need to set their primary name and have at least 100 ENS in delegated voting power to be eligible for the feature.
—
@karpatkey recently presented an update on its Endowment, reporting a current value of $96.7 million. This marks an increase from the $95.3 million reported on March 19th. The update included details on operational changes, particularly noting the withdrawal of Ethereum in preparation for a forthcoming project or operation.
Endowment Overview:
Portfolio Composition:
Ether: 77.1%
Stablecoins: 22.9%
Capital Utilization: 99.8%
Current APR: 4.97%
Operational Moves:
Withdrew ETH for upcoming executable
—
The March Endowment report is now available on Karpatkey’s Website. This report provides a detailed overview of the endowment’s finances and allocations. A high-level overview is made available below for reader’s convenience:
Balance Overview:
Total funds in the endowment: $104,202,838
Capital utilization: 99.8%
Monthly DeFi results: $443,017
Annual Percentage Yield (APY): 5.27%
Review the full report prepared by prepared by Karpatkey here.
—
Financial Overview:
Revenue > Cash Burn, Runway: 211 months
Revenues: $3.2M (up from $2.4M last month, and $3.1M last year)
Cash inflow: $1.3M (down from $1.5M last month, and from $1.7M last year), exceeding cash burn by 1.97 times
Normalized Cash Burn: $0.7M, with Reserves now at $140M (ETH: $108M, USDC: $32M)
Total Endowment: $95.8M, with P&L of $6.2M, primarily from ETH mark-to-market gains
Review the full report prepared by @Steakhouse here.
—
The Ecosystem Working Group strengthens the ENS Protocol by facilitating developer relations, identifying and funding high-potential projects that enhance ENS, and bolstering support for ENS-aligned initiatives overall.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Thursdays · 4:00 – 5:00pm UTC
Term 5 Ecosystem Stewards:
—
Greg Skril, from Developer Relations at ENS Labs, provided an update on a series of current and upcoming initiatives.
At the ETHLondon Hackathon, 24 teams developed projects on ENS, and 5 teams were awarded prizes. Infrastructure has been established to provide ENS subnames to participants during ETHGlobal, in collaboration with the Public Goods Working Group.
ENS Labs hosted an offsite event and has sent members to BUIDL Asia and ETH Bucharest to mentor developers and deliver keynote presentations.
Technological developments include coordinated efforts to improve library support for gasless DNSSEC and offchain names using Go-ENS. A significant update to app.ens.domains now offers instant loading of subnames. Google is supporting ENS name searches, and Basescan, an L2 block explorer, has incorporated ENS lookups. Additionally, ENS Labs has been addressing various other areas, including ongoing bug fixes for their Manager App, layer 2 research, and the development of next-generation extended DNS resolvers to simplify text record integration for ENS names.
—
Mattis, introduced ENS-Auth, a system designed for identity and access management needs. Their approach involves minting and wrapping a subdomain named ‘groups’ under an ENS domain, then integrating it with the ensauth contract. This allows for efficient onboarding to a group management system, making it ideal for use within any onchain organization. Their onchain app allows for the creation, assignment, and management of groups and users. Further technical details, go to their GitHub repository. A video demonstration is available here. For any questions, reach out to Mattis J. Deisen directly via LinkedIn.
—
Arr00 presented WNS.vote, a novel voting platform with a focus on sybil-resistant quadratic voting mechanisms. It features an onchain registry that allows each individual to validate one ENS through WorldCoin’s unique identity verification process, which scans the user’s eyeball. This method ensures that each vote is cast by a distinct human being, thereby improving the integrity of the voting process. For more, visit the ETHGlobal site for a demonstration.
—
GovScore is an onchain scoring system developed by Onchain Clarity Co. to encourage a culture of accountability. The system awards points based on specific criteria, including setting ENS records. By incentivizing delegates to set their records through its scoring mechanism — accounting for 2 out of a total possible 10 points — GovScore promotes a transparent ecosystem where delegates are identifiable, and their actions are easily referenced. Transparency improves the health of the DAO ecosystem and serves as a basis for accountability. Additionally, GovScore takes into account voting history and the distribution of voting power to foster consistent and diverse representation in the decision-making process.
—
Presented by @clowes.eth, ETH Tools offers a suite of resources to enhance the developer experience on Ethereum. Their website, provides a range of tools designed to optimize blockchain interactions for developers. Features include the ability to sign messages, generate ENS hashes, resolve text, and a comprehensive ENS Whois service.
—
Brantly.eth presented updates on the Ethereum Follow Protocol (EFP), an onchain social graph protocol for Ethereum. Despite recent challenges, including team departures, EFP is progressing with assistance from Scope Lift. A Delaware non-profit corporation has been formed with a board of directors, and both the protocol’s architecture and manager app have been designed. Smart contracts are in place, and the MVP features for launch are set. EFP has secured 55 launch partners and is now preparing for its testnet release. EFP are actively hiring. Details available here.
—
The Public Goods Working Group supports the greater Ethereum ecosystem by identfying and funding open-source development.
Meeting Minutes:
Meeting Info:
Thursdays · 5:00 - 5:45pm UTC
Term 5 Public Goods Stewards:
—
Eduardo, a Term 5 Public Goods steward, recently delivered a presentation at ETHGuatemala, which is a recipient of the ENS Public Goods Grant. He provided an introduction to ENS in Spanish to an audience of 200 viewers.
—
The Token Engineering Academy (TEA), a Public Goods grantee, provided updates on its education initiative, engaging over 3700 students with more than 1000 exams passed. They are currently inviting learners to join their upcoming cohort from April 25 to July 2024, focusing on building skill sets in token engineering. Additionally, TEA offers a $10k fellowship grant, awarded through a voting mechanism, to support dedicated students. More information about their TE Track at EthCC 2024, taking place on July 10, can be found in Kaidlyne Neukam’s Medium post.
—
Simone Staffa from ETHRome, organized the first Web3 Hackathon in Italy last October. Building on this success, another event is slated for this year. The event is scheduled for October 4-6, 2024, in Rome, Italy, and will focus on tracks related to Privacy and Account Abstraction. To view quantitative results from last year’s event, Simone prepared slides for review. Potential sponsors interested in participating in the event can view more information about the event here.
—
Corina @snowdot presented Dhive, a governance data hub that is focused on indexing the Ethereum ecosystem and providing seeds to index across various chains and organizations, aiming to offer a holistic view of onchain governance.
—
The Public Goods Working Group launched a Perpetual Bounty program to inspire open-source development of infrastructure, tools, and resources that improve the adoption of Ethereum and web3 overall. A grant pool of $5,000 USDC is available to developers who are working on notable projects. The Working Group suggested builder dieas such as developing Warpcast Frames that highlight public goods projects, decentralized identity verification, and decentralized web hosting services.
—
ENS DAO offers several resources for understanding and participating in its ecosystem.
ENS DAO Basics: Details the ENS DAO, including voting and governance.
Support Docs: Provides guidance on registration, renewals, and development aspects.
Governance Docs: Offers additional insights into governance structure.
ENS Agora: Governance hub for proposal review and voting.
Give Feedback: Feedback platform where users share input to improve ENS.
ENS Repository: The ENS Protocol’s main Github Repository.
–
Thank you very much for reading! Goodbye. 👋
Funding Request: Meta-Governance Working Group (1H) | Social |
Funding Request: Public Goods Working Group (1H) | Social |
Funding Transfer: Public Goods Working Group (1H) | Executable |
Enable Self-Funding for the Endowment | Executable |
ENS Steward Vesting Proposal | Social | Pending |
![]() | 4pm UTC | Thursday |
![]() | 5pm UTC | Thursday |
$25,000 |
Infrastructure stack connecting ENS and Ethereum with off-chain systems. | $25,000 |
A no-code platform for creating decentralized websites for ENS domain owners. | $25,000 |
Funding Request: Meta-Governance Working Group (1H) | Social |
Funding Request: Public Goods Working Group (1H) | Social |
Funding Transfer: Public Goods Working Group (1H) | Executable |
Enable Self-Funding for the Endowment | Executable |
![]() | 4pm UTC | Thursday |
|---|
![]() | 5pm UTC | Thursday |
|---|
Funding Request: Meta-Governance Working Group (1H) | Social |
Funding Request: Public Goods Working Group (1H) | Social |
Funding Transfer: Public Goods Working Group (1H) | Executable |
Enable Self-Funding for the Endowment | Executable |
ENS Steward Vesting Proposal | Social | Pending |
![]() | 4pm UTC | Thursday |
![]() | 5pm UTC | Thursday |
$25,000 |
Infrastructure stack connecting ENS and Ethereum with off-chain systems. | $25,000 |
A no-code platform for creating decentralized websites for ENS domain owners. | $25,000 |
Funding Request: Meta-Governance Working Group (1H) | Social |
Funding Request: Public Goods Working Group (1H) | Social |
Funding Transfer: Public Goods Working Group (1H) | Executable |
Enable Self-Funding for the Endowment | Executable |
![]() | 4pm UTC | Thursday |
|---|
![]() | 5pm UTC | Thursday |
|---|
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
Share Dialog