Here is the London Token Fundraising Manifesto

There are multiple movements being organized by the crytpo world to create a legitimate and sustainable Initial Coin Offering ecosystem. This means putting the hammer to fraud and creating a set of principles based best practices to guide the nascent industry as it goes from zero to light speed in a matter of months. Initiated by Professor Michael Mainelli’s  Z/Yen Group, we have republished the Manifesto in its entirety below as we believe the sooner the ICO industry professionalizes tokenized offerings the better.

The Manifesto was originally published on LongFinance along with a broad group of signatories supporting the movement included beneath the document.

The fastest way for an industry to fail is to allow rampant fraud without prominent leaders adding much needed self-regulation. The London Token Fundraising Manifesto is a step in the right direction.


The London Token Fundraising Manifesto 

23 October 2017

Introduction

A spectre is haunting ‘smart ledgers’, a spectre that a great technological advance for mankind may fall prey to incompetency or fraud, or both, because of a token and coin bubble. A bubble driven by rational and irrational investment, honest optimism and hope, and some lies and scams.

Smart ledgers are the confluence of distributed ledger (aka blockchain) technology with embedded computer code, cryptography, and consensus techniques for validating transactions. Smart ledgers have the potential to organise cooperative forms of commerce & trade less susceptible to central third party monopolies or cheating. Trade reaps economic benefits from specialisation and comparative advantage. Trade creates prosperity, shares success, and enriches our environment. Trust holds all trade relationships together. Smart ledgers help build trust, and thus trade.

Greed & Fear

Where is the new technology that has not created some form of bubble? Bubbles are part of innovation. If we knew how to create innovation without bubbles, it wouldn’t be innovation. Mistakes will be made. Projects and companies will fail. There will be waste. There will be charlatans and crooks, as well as the incompetent, attracted to the desires of people to invest in a new technology that shows so much promise.

Where is the new technology that has not been decried as dangerous by its incumbent opponents? The great potential of this technology risks being put back significantly, denying benefits to billions, if significantly tainted with incompetent delivery or fraudulent schemes. In that eventuality, rightly, expect regulators, the judiciary, legislators, and the public to bear down on the use of smart ledgers.

How to minimise waste and fraud? Both fears have substance in the exponential rise of initial token and coin offerings. Responsible self-regulation is needed. Two suggested areas of action result from this fact:

1 – the smart ledger community needs to help clarify the use of tokens and coins in its own best interest;

2 – where tokens and coins have a role, that role needs to meet certain standards, minimal now but evolving as we learn.

Thus, we suggest below for discussion a dual manifesto, an ethical framework and a personal “code of conduct” for token issuers:

‘Ethical Framework’ For Token Issuers

We take the four tenets of Principlism – autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, and justice – as our starting point. We combine the four tenets with four City of London commercial principles derived from “Meum Fidem, Meum Pactum”, “my word is my bond” – openness, honesty, transparency, and fairness:

1. Autonomy – ensure that those offered Tokens are informed of what they are and what they represent, why they are necessary, and have the information needed to determine the Token’s value to them, and are entering into such a relation freely:

Openness

Is everyone affected by the Tokens aware of the designers’ and promoters’ intended consequences?

2. Beneficence – Tokens should serve a useful and necessary commercial or social purpose:

Honesty

Have we been truthful about actions or decisions with everyone involved, no material omissions, and told no lies or ‘half-truths’?

3. Non-maleficence – considered thinking has been done on how to reduce the risks and impact of a failure of the Tokens in whole or part, and to ensure self-sustainability after trading begins:

Transparency

Have we been clear and not misleading to any party?

4. Justice – the social distribution of benefits and burdens are seen to be equitable by the parties engaging with Tokens:

Fairness

Have we made sure that Tokens will not result in any party being unknowingly disadvantaged or unfairly advantaged, and been fair in token distributions and use over time?

Personal ‘Code of Conduct’ For Token Issuers

1. Trustworthy – To act honestly and fairly at all times, putting first the interests of clients and customers and to be a good steward of their interests and those of counterparties, taking into account the nature of the business relationship with each of them, the nature of the service to be provided to them and the individual mandates given by them.

2. Dutiful – To act with integrity in fulfilling the responsibilities of your appointment and seek to avoid any acts, omissions or business practices which damage the reputation of your organisation, the cyptocurrency, initial coin offering, token, and smart ledger ecosystem, and the wider corporate and financial services world.

3. Lawful – To observe applicable law, regulations and professional conduct standards when carrying out token activities, and to interpret and apply them to the best of your ability according to principles rooted in trust, honesty and integrity.

4. Careful – To observe the standards of market integrity, good practice, conduct, and confidentiality required or expected of participants in markets when engaging in any form of market dealings.

5. Unconflicted – To be alert to and manage fairly and effectively and to the best of your ability any relevant conflict of interest.

6. Competent – To attain and actively manage a level of professional and technological competence appropriate to your responsibilities, to commit to continuing learning to ensure the currency of your knowledge, skills and expertise and to promote the development of others.

7. Contained – To decline to act in any matter about which you are not competent unless you have access to such advice and assistance as will enable you to carry out the work in a professional manner.

8. Aspiring – To strive to uphold the highest personal and professional standards at all times.

 

SIGNATORIES

Antony P N Abell, Founder, Universal TrustMe Engine

Gavin Blem, Founder, Blockchain Escrow

Derin Çağ, Founder of Richtopia and Co-Founder of Marketing Runners

Dominic Cameron, Director & CTO (lastminute.com, BBC, Photobox)

Tim Campbell MBE, Founder of Bright Ideas Trust and Co-Founder of Marketing Runners

Neil Cattermull, Technology Influencer & Analyst

Jody Cleworth, CEO, MTI

John Corr, CEO, SmartLedger Limited

Roger Gewolb, Founder, Campaign for Fair Finance

Vinay Gupta, Founder, Hexayurt | Mattereum

Mihai Ivascu, Founder and CEO, Modex Tech

Douglas Johnson-Poensgen, CEO, Cadence Innova

Matthew Leitch, Director, Ridgeway Expertise Company

Per Lind, Co-founder, IOTA Foundation

Professor Michael Mainelli FCCA FCSI FBCS, Executive Chairman, Z/Yen Group

Michael Mathias, Founder & CEO, DasCoin

Trent McConaghy, Founder/CTO, Ocean Protocol | BigchainDB | IPDB

Bob McDowall, Special Advisor, Cardano Foundation (Zug)

Barbara Mellish ACIB, MBA MIRM, CEO, Centre for Citizenship Enterprise and Governance

Terry O’Hearn, Executive Chairman, DasFinancial AG

Michael Parsons FCA, Chairman & Executive Director, Cardano Foundation (Zug)

David Pinto, Founder, Ecosquared

Christopher James Pomfret, Narrator, BullionCoin

Alex Powell, Fimatix

David Siegel, CEO Pillar Project AG Switzerland and 2030 Limited UK

Jeremy Silver, CEO, Digital Catapult

Herbie Skeete, Managing Director, Mondo Visione

Chris Skinner, Chairman, The Financial Services Club

Karel Striegel, Founder & CEO, FundRequest

John Sullivan, Founder, Oula.la

Professor Olinga Taeed PhD, FIoD, Chairman, Centre for Citizenship Enterprise and Governance

Demetrios Zamboglou, Chief Business Development Officer, Lykke Corp

 

Not-So-Token Questions For Token Issuers

1. Do your tokens have a necessary, beneficial, commercial or social purpose?

2. Is it clear to everyone what your tokens represent, e.g. shares in a venture, project rights, a future trading coin, a promise of goods or services, a ‘social’ credit?

3. Do your ‘money supply’ rules or algorithms align value with the commercial or social purpose both immediately and over time?

4. Do you have a mechanism to return fairly any excess or unnecessary resources raised?

5. Do you have the professional and technical resources to deliver?



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