Research prompt¶
Title
Long-term governance and economic models for LEMM Vault & LEMM Studio
1. Context and assumptions¶
Assume the following:
- LEMM is a community-owned, clean, training-only music dataset and model ecosystem, targeting a global audience of creators, developers, and end-users.
- LEMM Vault is the long-term “memory” layer:
- Stores, vets, and protects community-contributed music, stems, MIDI, and metadata.
- Enforces that contributed works are clean, consented, and used for training-only (no redistribution or resale of raw works).
- Maintains rights, revocation, lineage, and auditability.
- LEMM Studio is the “music-producing” layer:
- A family of models and apps (text-to-music, symbolic generation, remix tools, etc.) trained (in part) on the Vault.
- Exposes interfaces for creators, consumers, and developers (e.g., web app, API, plug-ins).
- Is expected to become economically significant if successful: subscription revenue, usage-based revenue, B2B licensing, etc.
- A v0 technical spec for Vault and Studio already exists, focused on:
- Clean data ingestion and vetting.
- Training-only usage and safety.
- Lineage and audit.
- Minimal non-exploitative licensing for users of the Studio.
- This research is about the long-term governance and economic architecture that sits on top of that v0 tech spec and can evolve over 5–10+ years.
You are designing governance and economics for both Vault and Studio together as a single ecosystem, not two unrelated products.
2. Objectives¶
Design and compare credible long-term governance and economic models for LEMM that:
- Keep LEMM genuinely community-owned and non-exploitative at scale.
- Align incentives between:
- Vault contributors (people/orgs whose music powers the models),
- Studio builders (devs, product teams, operators),
- Studio users (creators using the tools),
- Funders and infrastructure providers.
- Are compatible with:
- Training-only commitments for Vault content.
- Strong safety, privacy, and rights revocation mechanisms.
- International legal and regulatory realities (especially EU and US).
- Provide sustainable economics:
- Funding for infra, maintenance, and governance operations.
- Fair and understandable participation in upside for contributors.
- Clear, simple economic flows for users and partners.
- Include a migration path from a minimal v0 (founder-run) setup to a more democratic and robust long-term governance structure.
The end result should be 2–4 complete candidate architectures plus a recommended target design and migration plan.
3. Scope and non-goals¶
In scope:
- Governance for:
- Data and rights in the Vault.
- Model training and deployment using Vault data.
- Policies governing Studio products, APIs, and partners.
- Economic flows:
- How value created by Studio (and any other LEMM-powered tools) is shared, reinvested, or allocated.
- Contributor participation in upside (royalty-like flows, revenue shares, profit shares, usage-based weights, etc.).
- Funding sources (donations, grants, revenue, equity, etc.).
- Organizational forms:
- Non-profit/foundation, cooperative, steward-owned structures, dual entities, etc.
- Optional on-chain or cryptographic primitives (only if genuinely justified and legally realistic).
- Long-term risks:
- Governance capture.
- Centralization and mission drift.
- Over-complex or legally fragile economic mechanisms.
- Regulatory exposure (e.g. securities law, KYC/AML, employment/tax implications).
Out of scope:
- Detailed technical implementation of Vault and Studio (assume v0 tech spec).
- Token price speculation or anything that requires financial promotion.
- Jurisdiction-specific tax optimization details (only high-level considerations).
4. Key design questions¶
Structure your research around the following question clusters.
4.1. What does “community-owned LEMM” actually mean in structure?¶
- Compare at least three ownership/governance paradigms for LEMM:
- A non-profit foundation controlling Vault and Studio.
- A cooperative / data cooperative with contributors as members.
- A dual structure: foundation (mission) + company (execution), with formal obligations between them.
- Optional: a heavily on-chain (DAO-like) model – but only if it can be made legally and operationally credible.
- For each paradigm, answer:
- Who ultimately controls:
- Vault policies (what gets in, what gets out)?
- Training and deployment of models?
- Studio product decisions and pricing?
- How do stakeholders (contributors, builders, users, funders) get representation or voice?
- How does the structure resist:
- Capture by a single corporate actor?
- Speculative hijacking?
- Long-term drift away from “clean, non-exploitative” principles?
Deliverable: a comparison table of governance models with pros/cons, and an initial ranking for LEMM’s context.
4.2. Vault-specific governance and rights representation¶
- How should Vault contributors be represented long-term?
- Individual membership vs. pool/collective representation.
- One-person-one-vote vs. stake/usage-weighted vs. hybrid.
- How to incorporate institutional contributors (labels, libraries, ensembles) without crowding out individuals.
- How should Vault policies be controlled?
- Admission and de-listing criteria.
- Changes to the definition of “clean” and “training-only”.
- Criteria for what models can and cannot be trained on Vault.
- What formal rights should contributors have beyond the technical spec?
- Governance rights (vote, veto, propose).
- Economic rights (to what, exactly, and under which conditions?).
- Transparency rights (what they can see about usage and models).
- How should revocation and rights changes impact:
- Governance (e.g., if a major contributor leaves).
- Economics (e.g., adjusting future shares, not retroactively rewriting the past).
Deliverable: a Vault governance model (or 2–3 variants) specifying: - Membership criteria and rights, - Voting/decision mechanisms, - A clear lifecycle of a contributor’s rights (join, active, inactive, revoke, exit).
4.3. Studio governance and control¶
- Who decides:
- Which models are launched and under what constraints?
- Safety and moderation standards?
- Pricing and commercial strategies for the Studio?
- How tightly should Studio and Vault governance be coupled?
- One shared governance body vs. separate bodies with formal contracts.
- What decisions should Vault be able to block in Studio (e.g., deploying a model trained on Vault data into high-risk applications)?
- How can Studio governance stay nimble and product-focused while respecting Vault’s long-term rights and constraints?
Deliverable: a Studio governance charter for each candidate overall model: - Which body decides what, - How Studio is accountable to Vault governance, - Escalation paths for conflicts (e.g., when business wants something Vault sees as misaligned).
4.4. Economic flows and value sharing¶
- Map out the value flows in several scenarios:
- B2C: individual creators pay subscription/usage fees to use Studio.
- B2B: companies/licensees pay for API or model access.
- Grants/donations: public or philanthropic funding to support LEMM.
- Internal: revenue reinvested into infra, R&D, safety, and contributor rewards.
- For each governance model, design at least one value sharing mechanism that:
- Gives contributors a meaningful but understandable share in upside.
- Does not violate training-only commitments (no per-track “sync-style” licensing of raw works).
- Is technically and operationally simple enough to implement and explain.
- Consider multiple designs:
- Global “Vault reward pool” funded by a fixed percentage of Studio net revenue.
- Usage-weighted distributions based on:
- Training data contribution (e.g., track-level weights),
- Measured contribution to model performance or usage (if feasible),
- Simpler proxies (e.g., “contributor tiers”).
- Non-monetary value: governance power, visibility, priority access, etc.
- Evaluate each design against:
- Legal exposure (e.g., does it become a security?).
- Fairness and perception for small vs. large contributors.
- Administrative and computational cost.
- Robustness to gaming and adversarial behavior.
Deliverables: - Annotated diagrams of economic flows. - A shortlist of 2–3 reward mechanisms with pros/cons and a clear recommendation for a v1 and a v2 design.
4.5. Funding and capital structure¶
- Identify potential funding sources over time:
- Early grants/philanthropy.
- Community contributions (non-mandatory).
- Revenue reinvestment from Studio.
- Ethical venture/debt/partnership financing.
- For each candidate governance model, describe:
- Who can invest or provide capital, under what rights and limitations.
- How to ensure funders cannot override the core mission or expropriate community value.
- How exit or liquidity could work without turning LEMM into a purely extractive asset.
- Explore structures such as:
- Non-profit controlling a for-profit Studio entity via mission lock and golden share.
- Steward-owned models (e.g., capped returns, voting separation from economic rights).
- Cooperative capital models (member loans, revenue-based financing).
- Highlight:
- Regulatory and accounting considerations at a high level.
- Trade-offs between simplicity, speed of execution, and long-term alignment.
Deliverable: for each overall candidate architecture, a funding and capital strategy with: - Early-phase setup, - Growth phase, - Long-term steady state.
4.6. International legal and regulatory envelope¶
- Focus on EU and US as anchor jurisdictions:
- How do cooperative and foundation/charitable structures differ in each?
- What are the implications for revenue-sharing to global contributors?
- Identify red lines:
- When does a contributor reward scheme risk being treated as a security?
- What level of KYC/AML is triggered by certain types of payouts?
- What is realistically implementable for a global community where many contributors are individuals, sometimes minors?
- Propose legally cautious defaults:
- Conservative reward designs that reduce securities/AML risk.
- Clear separation between governance rights and financial rights when helpful.
- Reasonable thresholds or constraints on payouts.
Deliverable: a brief legal/regulatory risk map with optional fallback designs (e.g., move from monetary rewards to governance rewards if necessary).
4.7. Long-term risk and abuse analysis¶
- Identify at least:
- 5–10 major governance risks (capture, ossification, apathy, mission drift).
- 5–10 economic risks (gaming, value leakage, unfair concentration of rewards).
- For each risk, propose:
- Mitigations in governance design (checks and balances, transparency, rotation, quorum rules).
- Mitigations in economic design (caps, floors, clawbacks, eligibility criteria).
- Consider:
- How to handle catastrophic or controversial events (e.g., large institutional contributor is later found to be problematic).
- Dispute resolution mechanisms (internal panels, external arbitration, etc.).
Deliverable: a risk register with severity/likelihood estimates and mitigations tied to specific governance/economic design choices.
4.8. Migration path and phasing¶
- Design a three-phase migration path:
- Phase 0: founder-led or small-team governance while building initial tech and community.
- Phase 1: hybrid governance where community representation is added but with strong guardrails.
- Phase 2: mature governance where community bodies have real power over Vault and major Studio decisions, with stable economic flows.
- For each phase, specify:
- Which governance organs exist (board, councils, committees).
- What decisions they control and what remains centralized.
- How and when transitions are triggered (e.g., usage milestones, revenue milestones, time-based milestones).
- Ensure that changes are:
- Understandable for contributors and users.
- Legally and operationally realistic.
- Reversible/evolvable where necessary, while maintaining trust and commitments.
Deliverable: a timeline and transition design with clear criteria for moving from one phase to the next.
5. Required outputs¶
At the end of the research, produce:
- Option space overview
- 2–4 end-to-end candidate architectures combining:
- Governance structure for Vault and Studio,
- Economic flows and reward mechanisms,
- Funding and capital strategies,
- Legal/regulatory framing.
-
Each with diagrams and concise narrative.
-
Recommended target design
- A single recommended long-term architecture for LEMM Vault + Studio.
-
Rationale vs alternatives, including why some attractive ideas were rejected.
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Migration plan
- A phased roadmap from today’s v0 spec to the target design.
-
Key milestones, triggers, and early experiments.
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Risk & mitigation dossier
- Risk register for governance and economics.
-
Short plan for monitoring and iterating on the design as real-world data comes in.
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Implementation checklist
- A minimal “first 12–24 months” checklist:
- Which legal entities to create and in what order.
- Which economic mechanisms to launch in v1 vs defer to v2.
- Which internal roles or bodies must be staffed/constituted (board, councils, reviewers, committees).
6. Constraints and design principles¶
Throughout the research and design, enforce these principles:
- No back-door exploitation: avoid structures where, in practice, one actor can control or appropriate the Vault or Studio against community interest.
- Legally conservative defaults: prioritize designs that are robust to regulatory scrutiny in major jurisdictions.
- Simplicity where possible: avoid overly complex mechanisms that are impossible to explain to typical contributors or users.
- Global inclusivity: treat contributors and users as global by default; do not assume EU/US-only.
- Alignment with “clean” and “training-only” commitments: never propose economic mechanisms that require breaking those commitments (e.g., selling raw tracks or personal data).
End with a synthesized, concrete blueprint that a founding team could use to brief legal counsel, co-founders, and early contributors on “how LEMM works” as a community-owned Vault + Studio ecosystem over the long term.