From 395bf39fce4fbd935ff102569c7fdb04a0f464bf Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Christopher Williams Date: Sun, 8 Mar 2026 21:55:58 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] Fix grammatical error in Arbitrum DAO Grants section Corrected grammatical error in the description of Arbitrum DAO Grants. --- src/content/mechanisms/direct-grants.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/src/content/mechanisms/direct-grants.md b/src/content/mechanisms/direct-grants.md index c5fbfe3b..d69f9318 100644 --- a/src/content/mechanisms/direct-grants.md +++ b/src/content/mechanisms/direct-grants.md @@ -74,7 +74,7 @@ Direct grants work best when: **Ethereum Foundation Ecosystem Support Program (ESP)** is one of the longest-running direct grant programs in the ecosystem, launched in 2018 to support open-source public goods across developer tooling, cryptographic research, infrastructure, and community development. In late 2025, ESP shifted from an open application model to a proactive, wishlist-driven approach organized around Requests for Proposals, reflecting the scalability limits of committee review and a move toward tighter strategic alignment. -**Arbitrum DAO Grants** operate through a Dedicated Domain Allocator (DDA) model, in which community-elected domain experts manage grants within specific focus areas using delegated budgets and independent review authority. This structure decentralizes decision-making while preserving expert judgment, demonstrating how direct grants can scale through pluralistic review rather than centralized committees. +**Arbitrum DAO Grants** operate through a Dedicated Domain Allocator (DDA) models, in which community-elected domain experts manage grants within specific focus areas using delegated budgets and independent review authority. This structure decentralizes decision-making while preserving expert judgment, demonstrating how direct grants can scale through pluralistic review rather than centralized committees. **Polygon Community Grants** use a domain allocator structure spanning DeFi, AI agents, consumer applications, infrastructure, research, and community development. Allocators review proposals against published rubrics, with milestone-based payouts tied to deliverables, illustrating direct grants operating at protocol-ecosystem scale with structured governance oversight.