Ethereum’s infamous DAO hack from 2016 is being transformed into a long-term security asset, as $220 million worth of unclaimed ETH is repurposed into a new decentralized security fund.
A group of early Ethereum contributors, including Vitalik Buterin and Griff Green, have launched a major security initiative repurposing 2016 DAO hack funds. The new project, dubbed The DAO Fund, will turn unclaimed assets into a renewable funding source for Ethereum security and governance.
In 2016, The DAO was a groundbreaking but flawed experiment in decentralized governance. Built on Ethereum, it attracted one of the largest crowdsales in crypto history, raising over $150 million. Just months later, a bug in its smart contracts allowed a hacker to drain around $60 million in ETH, shaking the network’s foundations.
The Ethereum community was divided on how to respond. A hard fork was implemented to roll back the damage, but not all users agreed, leading to the creation of Ethereum Classic. Despite the fork, tens of thousands of ETH remained unclaimed, either due to user error, lost keys, or overlooked claims.
Today, those dormant assets have grown in value and are now being reintegrated into the ecosystem as a proactive solution rather than a lingering problem.
The $220 million security fund will be sourced from two main pools:
Out of this, 69,420 ETH will be staked, creating a yield-based endowment expected to return $8 million per year in staking rewards. This yield will be distributed to Ethereum security initiatives on a recurring basis.
Grants will be allocated through DAO-native governance tools, giving the community direct involvement. The distribution methods include:
Eligibility will be managed by the Ethereum Foundation, with operational help from public goods group Giveth, co-founded by Griff Green. Open applications will allow external operators to participate, ensuring transparency and minimizing centralization risks.
Nearly a decade after TheDAO’s collapse fractured the Ethereum community, its remaining assets are being used to strengthen the very thing it once put at risk: Ethereum’s security culture. As Griff Green noted, the DAO hack catalyzed Ethereum’s audit industry and changed how the ecosystem views smart contract safety.
Green said on the Unchained podcast:
With Ethereum now securing hundreds of billions of dollars, the timing of this initiative highlights the importance of long-term investment in protocol safety and user protection.
In my experience, crypto rarely gets a second chance to right a wrong. But this is one of those rare times. Taking unclaimed funds from Ethereum’s most infamous hack and turning them into a perpetual, DAO-governed security endowment is both poetic and practical. I find it inspiring that the same community that once split over a crisis is now uniting to build a safer future using the very assets that caused so much division. This is crypto maturity in action.
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