Headline: Replacing Marketplace Issuance with a new vehicle data access fee system
Author: The DIMO Foundation
Submitter(s): The DIMO Foundation [0xCED3c922200559128930180d3f0bfFd4d9f4F123]
Status: Review (until December 23, 17:00 UTC)
Voting URL: Pending
Discussion Forum: Discord #🗳️governance forum
Vote Type: Level 3
This amendment fundamentally alters the way in which the DIMO protocol charges developers for access to vehicle data. It removes the old system entirely, and replaces it with a simple flat monthly fee of 1,250 DCX ($1.25 USD) per vehicle.
DCX is a stable credit that is always worth $0.001 USD and it can only be purchased using the $DIMO token. $DIMO that is spent to acquire DCX goes into a pool. Each month that pool is partially distributed to the nodes that store the offchain vehicle data and part of it is kept by the DIMO protocol treasury as profit. This treasury can be reinvested or burned per future governance votes.
Modifications and new fees (e.g., an increased monthly charge for video streaming from embedded cameras and dash cams) can be added with future amendments.
As developers have shown up to build on DIMO, the appropriate business model and pricing structure has become more clear. This proposal is designed to fairly compensate the DIMO protocol, as well as the node that stores the offchain data that is being accessed by the developer, in the simplest terms possible.
// If passed, this proposal would replace the following lines in the Header of DIP-3:
Title: DIP-3: Vehicle Data Access Fees
Headline: How developers pay per car per month to access vehicle data
// and would replace the Abstract with:
Developers accessing vehicle data pay a simple fee per vehicle per month. Proceeds are partially distributed to the nodes that store the offchain vehicle data and partially kept by the DIMO protocol treasury as profit. This treasury can be reinvested or burned per future governance votes.
// and would replace the Motivation with:
This proposal is designed to fairly compensate the DIMO protocol, as well as the node that stores the offchain data that is being accessed by the developer, in the simplest and fairest terms possible.
// and would replace the Specifications with:
Developers accessing vehicle data pay a simple fee of 1,250 DCX ($1.25 USD) per vehicle per month of data. If they are performing a "look back" and are pulling data for previous months they did not already pay for, they pay 1,250 DCX per each previous month capped at 12,500 DCX (e.g., pulling 10, 12, or 24 months of historical data costs 12,500 DCX). The cap is inclusive of the current month.
For example, when a user first signs up in DIMO Mobile and the app retrieves their vehicle data, the app publisher, Digital Infrastructure Inc., must pay 1,250 DCX. If that user had already onboarded their car to DIMO a year prior using another separate DIMO app and are connecting to DIMO Mobile for the first time, the publisher pays 1,250 DCX for the current month of data plus an additional 1,250 DCX for each prior month, capped at 12,500 DCX only if they are ingesting that historical data (e.g., to show historical trips taken).
DCX is a stable credit that is always worth $0.001 USD and it can only be purchased using the $DIMO token. Websites like console.dimo.org abstract this process for the developer, allowing them to use a credit card to buy DCX in a simple flow. Once DCX is spent by a developer it is burned and cannot be reused.
Modifications and new fees can be added with future amendments. Some likely examples include:
- An increased monthly charge for video streaming from embedded cameras and dash cams;
- Fine-grained a la cart options that allow developers to pay a lower base rate per vehicle plus add-on fees for accessing telemetry, location, documents, and/or commands; and
- Per action fees such as updating vehicle permissions, pairing and unpairing a device, etc.
While fees are the same, whether a developer is just getting started or a large enterprise, the Ignite Grants team is equipped to offer grants to hobbyists and startups.
The nodes that store vehicle data (more on what a node is here) charge developers to access vehicles using DCX, but this is not how they are compensated. DCX is non-transferrable and is burned when spent by developers.
Rather, the $DIMO that is spent to acquire DCX goes into a pool. Each month, 60% of that pool is kept by the protocol as profit. This builds up the treasury, which can be reinvested and/or burned per future governance votes. The remaining 40% is distributed to entities based on how much DCX was spent on their behalf proportional to every other node.
As an examples, let's imagine there are two nodes, Node A and Node B. In a given month, 1,125,000 DCX is burned by developers paying to access data from Node A, and 125,000 DCX is burned by developers who access data from Node B. Node A receives 36% of the pool (40% * 90%) and Node B receives 4% (40% * 10%).
// and would replace the Implementation with:
If passed, DIP-3 would be updated as specified above after the four day timelock concludes and access fees would go into effect starting January 1, 2025.
If passed, DIP-3 would be updated as specified above after the four day timelock concludes.
Copyright and related rights waived via CC0
Please cite this document as:
The DIMO Foundation, "DIP-3: Amendment 2", November 2024. [Online serial]. Available: [https://github.com/DIMO-Network/DIP]
The contract addresses for $DIMO are 0x5fab9761d60419c9eeebe3915a8fa1ed7e8d2e1b on Ethereum and 0xE261D618a959aFfFd53168Cd07D12E37B26761db on Polygon. Please always confirm that you are interacting with these contract addresses and not those of a fraudulent imitator. This proposal may not be enacted if it violates Cayman Islands law. Please triple check that any communications are authentic as it’s common for scammers to try to trick you into sending them crypto or into revealing your private keys.
Certain statements in this document constitute forward-looking statements. The words “may,” “will,” “should,” “project,” “anticipate,” “believe,” “estimate,” “intend,” “expect,” “continue,” and similar expressions or the negatives thereof are generally intended to identify forward-looking statements. Such forward-looking statements, including the intended actions and performance objectives, involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other important factors that could cause the actual results, performance, or achievements to differ materially from any future results, performance, or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. There can be no assurance that such statements will prove to be accurate as actual results and future events could differ materially from those anticipated in such statements. Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements and nothing in this document represents a promise of specific work to be completed in the future.