Built for the Ecosystem
DOER DAPP is designed as shared infrastructure, not a closed product.
While DOER DAPP introduces new ways to express intent, automate actions, and enforce transaction policies, its purpose is not to replace existing tools. Instead, it acts as a coordination layer that improves how users authorize and execute on-chain actions.
Whether someone interacts with crypto through a wallet, a trading interface, a DAO dashboard, or a custom application, DOER DAPP is designed to fit into that flow rather than compete with it.
The protocol focuses on one goal: Make automation, permissions, and execution safer, clearer, and programmable across the ecosystem.
For Wallet Users
For everyday users, DOER DAPP improves how on-chain actions are authorized. Most wallets today require one of two behaviors: • Approve similar transactions repeatedly, or • Grant broad permissions that remain active indefinitely. DOER introduces a third option. Users can define intents and policies once, then allow actions to execute automatically within clearly defined limits. This reduces both friction and risk for people who frequently interact with:
DeFi protocols
NFT marketplaces
staking and reward systems
governance tools
You do not need to understand how the protocol works internally to benefit from it. If you understand what you are allowing and why, DOER DAPP works in your favor.
For Power Users
Power users often combine multiple tools, strategies, and automation scripts. While this increases efficiency, it also increases exposure to permission risk. DOER provides a safer structure for these workflows. Power users can:
automate repeated on-chain actions
limit the maximum value that can be executed
restrict execution to specific contracts
enforce expiration times for permissions
This makes automation more predictable and auditable. Instead of relying entirely on external bots or scripts, users rely on on-chain policy enforcement that cannot be bypassed.
For Tool Builders
For developers building Web3 tools, DOER DAPP provides a safer automation foundation. Many tools today request permissions that are broader than necessary. This increases risk for users and liability for developers. By integrating with DOER DAPP, tools can:
operate only within user-defined constraints
make automation rules explicit
reduce the need for persistent permissions
allow users to revoke authority at any time
Developers gain powerful capabilities without needing to hold custody of user assets or request unlimited approvals. This encourages the development of more responsible automation systems.
For DAOs and Communities
DAOs frequently rely on shared operational workflows. Examples include:
treasury operations
governance execution
reward distribution
recurring operational tasks
These workflows often require delegated authority, which can be difficult to manage safely. DOER DAPP allows DAOs to delegate execution authority without losing control.
DAO participants can define:
time-limited authority
spending limits
execution frequency
contract allowlists
This makes delegation transparent and auditable while preserving operational efficiency.
For Web3 Contributors
DOER DAPP also introduces on-chain work infrastructure. Projects can publish tasks directly through the protocol, allowing contributors to complete work and receive rewards on-chain. Examples include:
testing applications
community participation
development tasks
governance contributions
Each completed task contributes to an on-chain reputation record, allowing contributors to build a verifiable Web3 work history. This creates new opportunities for participation across the ecosystem.
Open by Design
DOER DAPP is intentionally designed to be open and composable. It is:
understandable without deep protocol knowledge
enforceable through on-chain rules
integratable into existing tools and interfaces
The goal is not to create another isolated platform. The goal is to provide safe primitives that other systems can build on.
Not Just for Engineers
Although DOER DAPP exposes technical interfaces for developers, its purpose is broader.
Even if you never write code, DOER DAPP changes how you interact with crypto by:
making permissions clearer
making automation safer
making transaction risk visible
making authority easier to reason about
It is infrastructure designed to serve users first, while remaining powerful for builders.
Where to Go Next
If you are a user, explore how DOER DAPP changes approvals and permissions.
If you are a builder, learn how intents, policies, and mandates work together.
If you are a DAO contributor, explore controlled delegation and automated execution models.
The documentation is structured to meet you where you are, without assuming a single role.