Overclock Labs Acquires Cloudmos To Expand the Akash Supercloud: Proposal #286
Replies: 6 comments 9 replies
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Great new guys ! Happy for the Overclock and Cloudmos. I have a few questions though :
Again congratulations ! |
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I'm a bit irritated, it was published that Cloudmos has already been acquired by Overclock but this proposal requests the funds for that? Also, the wording is confusing. Who acquired Cloudmos? Overclock or the community, if 2/3 of the money comes from the community. How was the value of Cloudmos and the amount for the next 6 months determined? Why aquire cloudmos if the community could give them a grant with a aligned roadmap? |
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@zJuuu, Thanks for the feedback and we completely understand your concerns. Here are the answers to your questions, along with context on how these decisions were made. Let us know if we can clarify anything or offer more detail.
As mentioned in the original post, this acquisition will allow us to increase development speed and efficiency, which will result in better products and faster development cycles. All of this will happen through a transparent and open-source process that will ultimately benefit the entire Akash community. |
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Greg, regarding your below statement, I have a question: Going forward, do you not see a key risk in this on-chain governance system, where pretty solid devs (allegedly bringing 58pct of "new business" through their deploy tool) get rejected so badly? How could that even have happened, prop 185? Rejected by token holders not even reading who Cloudmos are, what they´ve built. Thing is, these bad strategic decisions cost time and capital. Web2 Corps cannot afford that. Startups even less so, given their runway is limited. Moving fast while staying lean and shipping is the name of the game. In the long run, this system of peeps taking what I call a "majority vote", then moving on with their lives (I do that too with most other chains), is a highway to hell. Don´t you guys see that? Is there a way to revamp the gov system to make it more agile? Any gov upgrade options considered please, or none at all? Now that Cloudmost gets acquired by OCL (good decision! Bravo) taking it under the roof, albeit for the little funds left in the pool, I have a direct question on you: After all, what else would the value accrual for the network be once you start monetizing the cloudmos deploy "gate"? (product development and open-source lib aside, of course) That brings me to the last question? Do you feel a close-to-empty Community Pool is a problem in the long run, and if so, how should it be refilled? Thank you for your precious time! |
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After having read the proposal and the discussion here, there are a number of irregularities with the messaging that are concerning. As we read in the announcement here and here, Overclock Labs have acquired Cloudmos. This proposal then describes that "The funds provided by Overclock are essentially a subsidy to the community pool. Overclock Labs will not retain any private IP from this acquisition. Everything will be open-source." While we support the end goal (Cloudmos being funded to open source their work), the wording in the proposal appears misleading. Should we not be agreeing whether the Akash Community Pool should be funding the open sourcing of Cloudmos or if indeed Cloudmos is being/has been acquired, should the proposal not be asking for the community fund to be paying Overclock Labs to open source their tooling which they have just acquired. The proposal then goes on to describe the use of funds is for the acquisition, and seems to suggest that Overclock will be paying Cloudmos for the open sourcing work themselves: "Beyond this acquisition funding, Overclock Labs will be compensating the Cloudmos team for a minimum of 6 months of development work to oversee the transition." There is also no description of the account that will receive the funds, is this controlled by Max/Cloudmos or Overclock Labs/a multi-sig? It's also a little convenient that we have started using a 30 day moving average for price calculations (See Proposal 208, 207, 200, etc.) given recent price movements however that's not necessarily an issue as long as proposers don't pick and choose in their favor each time. Are we just missing something or is it very confusing messaging? Looking forward to having the above clarified so that we can make an informed vote. EDIT: It makes a little more sense when I realised that Overclock have acquired Cloudmos the tool, not the company/team behind it. Nevertheless some of the above points are still valid. |
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Hi, Personally not for this, I feel the proposal massively overvalues this acquisition.
Point 6 tl;dr - Imagine this. This proposal is passed. Developers now know that they can build closed source tools, encourage reliance on them by the community, once there is enough reliance they can withhold development and force the community to "acquire" them. Sadly not staking so my vote amounts for little. |
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Overclock Labs Acquires Cloudmos To Expand the Akash Supercloud
submitted by: Tyler | Core Team
Takeaways:
Mission:
Overclock Labs is excited to join forces with the Cloudmos team to co-develop products with the goal of expanding Akash Network. This collaborative acquisition is the result of months of work between both teams to come to an agreement on terms that further our shared goal of developing great open-source products for Akash Network.
Overview:
The four points below provide an overview of the acquisition terms, which are designed to ensure a smooth transition and support successful collaboration between Overclock Labs and Cloudmos.
A Commitment to Open-Source
As a key part of the acquisition, Cloudmos will open-source its entire codebase. This will align the Cloudmos suite of products with Akash Console, which is already fully open-source. By sharing code and opening the development process, developers from around the world will be able to contribute directly to the growth of the Akash ecosystem.
Collaborative Development
Overclock Labs and the Cloudmos team will work together closely for a minimum of 6 months to continue developing Cloudmos and Akash Console. During this period, we will actively collaborate, and share code, to eliminate redundancy and increase the speed of development. This massively expands the potential user base for Akash. By collaborating closely, Cloudmos Deploy and Akash Console will be able to create a cohesive strategy that addresses distinct user segments both within web3 and in the broader development community outside of web3.
Community Pool Funding
Overclock Labs is requesting $200,000 in AKT (Akash Network's native token) from the Community Pool. This funding will be utilized to support the continued growth, and development of Cloudmos along with fully open-sourcing the Cloudmos codebase. The AKT granted will vest over a 6-month period. Please review the Cloudmos Deploy and Akash Console product strategy to learn more.
Contribution from Overclock Labs
Overclock Labs will contribute $100,000 in AKT alongside the funding from the Community Pool. This contribution demonstrates our commitment to the success of Cloudmos and Akash Network. The AKT contributed will vest over a 6-month period.
Conclusion
Everything related to Akash is fully open-source. This applies to the code that powers the network, but it also extends to the processes for governance and management. Contributors engage with Akash through a unique structure of working groups that meet publicly. Anyone from around the world can attend. This radically open structure allows for a level of collaboration that is not possible in closed-source development.
Among this global community of developers, Cloudmos has emerged as a standout contributor. Their flagship application, Cloudmos Deploy, is one of the most widely used tools in the Akash ecosystem. They have also moved quickly to ship popular tools like Cloudmos Alerts and Akashlytics.
This collaboration represents a win-win-win scenario for Akash Network’s community, Overclock Labs, and Cloudmos. By joining forces, Cloudmos will continue to make it easier and more intuitive to interact with Akash.
The primary goal of this acquisition is to ultimately deliver more value to our community as we move towards cloud parity. With a shared codebase, we will be able to improve UX, ship new features quickly, and reduce duplicate work. Together, we will accelerate the development of the world’s first operational Supercloud.
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