Alternative internet developer tomi has raised $40 million from venture capital firms as part of a broader effort to lure content creators to its decentralized World Wide Web alternative.
The funding round was led by venture firms DWF Labs, Ticker Capital and Piha Equities, as well as Japanese crypto investor Hirokado Kohji, tomi announced on March 21. The funding will be used by tomi to attract publishers and further develop its network, which is described as a “surveillance-free alternative” to the internet.
The tomi project launched in 2022 as a decentralized cloud computing network. The project is led by an anonymous group of crypto industry veterans who set out to create a version of the internet governed by a decentralized autonomous organization, or DAO. The tomiDAO is tasked with network governance, including voting on code alteration proposals and reaching consensus on managing content that violates community guidelines.
Related: DAO gets legal recognition in the US as Utah DAO Act passes
When asked how tomi helps users monetize their content, a spokesperson for the company clarified that all monetization efforts are facilitated through the network’s native token, TOMI. “The token is utilized as the primary currency for various activities within our network,” such as buying domains, paying transaction fees on tomi’s layer-2 network and participating in voting activities.
DAOs are blockchain-based entities with no central ownership governed by self-organizing communities. Their utility has seemingly grown over the years as more organizations look to implement bottom-up decision-making without hierarchical management. DAOs have enjoyed limited endorsement from governments, with the Marshall Islands moving to
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