Should we run pairwise or linear computation for our first Quadratic Funding mechanism? #344
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Gitcoin rounds currently use pairwise QF calculations, which are computationally expensive. Is there a compelling reason for us to continue with pairwise vs linear calculations? |
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Replies: 7 comments 5 replies
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@gdixon / @thelostone-mc as a starting point, could you give an explanation of the trade-offs between the two methods? |
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A more detailed description: Just a random thought when I was chatting up with the RPGF team. I'm trying to have us justify
Given we have passport score + FDD for fraud. A bigger question :
The regular QF : https://wtfisqf.com/ We had already implemented a version of it on dgrants as well |
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Some resources on pairwise QF from Gitcoin: |
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A few thoughts:
This was done a few rounds ago. There's been discussion about FDD running this analysis again, but it hasn't been prioritized AFAIK.
Could we do linear QF at the time of transaction for simple approximations and then do pairwise QF (or a more robust model) at the end of the round to finalize the payouts? Eventually, I'd love to run all of the model in the appendix of the DeSoc paper! |
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I'm interested in us exploring the experience flow similar to what Carl suggests here, in which there is a period after voting/contributing round closes and the final calculations are done. One of the things the original grants platform has attempted to do is give real-time results indicators during the rounds, but I worry this could be skewing results in a way that are not intentional. If we shift towards enabling sharing of opinions of projects and "marketing" of projects away from actual results, would this better enable a neutral platform with results that indicate the true desires and opinions of the community? |
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In the interest of a near-term resolution: I spoke with our next design partner (who will be the first users of the QF mechanism) and they are open to using linear QF for their next round. Given that, I'm opting to have v1 built as a linear solution — I think we can do a post-hoc analysis to learn a little bit more about different calculation approaches impact the distribution of that round. |
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Sounds good to me. Would love to see a collab with Carl and/or Omni to do a
post round data challenge similar to the way we're running the Trust Bonus
experimentation rounds.
Lindsey Thrift, VP of Product
LinkedIn <https://www.linkedin.com/in/thriftlindsey/> | Telegram
<https://t.me/lthrift>
<https://gitcoin.co/>
…On Mon, Sep 12, 2022 at 12:34 PM Nate Gosselin ***@***.***> wrote:
In the interest of a near-term resolution: I spoke with our next design
partner (who will be the first users of the QF mechanism) and they are open
to using linear QF for their next round. Given that, I'm opting to have v1
built as a linear solution — I think we can do a post-hoc analysis to learn
a little bit more about different calculation approaches impact the
distribution of that round.
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In the interest of a near-term resolution: I spoke with our next design partner (who will be the first users of the QF mechanism) and they are open to using linear QF for their next round. Given that, I'm opting to have v1 built as a linear solution — I think we can do a post-hoc analysis to learn a little bit more about different calculation approaches impact the distribution of that round.