What is dCorps
Entity kernel
The Hub is the base layer for canonical identity, roles, governance, wallets, and accounting events that every Hub corporation and Hub nonprofit shares.
dCorps Hub is a minimal, stable kernel for entity identity, authority, governance, and accounting, so organizations can operate in stablecoins now and attach optional adapters later.
Start with the core
A Cosmos-based Hub chain that defines the entity kernel: identity, authority, governance, wallets, and accounting events. In v1, Hub corporations and Hub nonprofits are complete containers: register, bind roles and wallets, run stablecoin operations with tagged events, and generate reproducible operating and allocation views.
What is dCorps
The Hub is the base layer for canonical identity, roles, governance, wallets, and accounting events that every Hub corporation and Hub nonprofit shares.
Why it matters
Governance actions, approvals, and accounting events are recorded as auditable state, so reporting can be reproduced without private spreadsheets.
How it runs
Roadmap modules for external workflows can be attached later, without redefining kernel semantics or rewriting history.
V1 HUB
A Hub-first workflow: start with complete Hub entities in v1, then optionally attach overlays later.
Hub entities (v1)
Create a Hub corporation or Hub nonprofit, bind roles and canonical wallets, and anchor baseline documents when needed.
Set authority
Bind canonical wallets, assign roles or boards, and define how approvals and governance actions execute.
Operate in stablecoins
Route inflows and outflows through canonical wallets and emit tagged accounting events for clean reporting.
Produce evidence
Generate operating or allocation views for any selected timeframe and anchor evidence for material items when needed.
Optional overlays
When needed, attach roadmap modules for jurisdiction workflows, institutional reporting, or attestations without changing kernel history.
Future extensions
Use apps on shared standards today; sub chains and public instruments remain optional future extensions.
Mission
Our mission is to enable anyone, anywhere, to create and run a serious, transparent, digitally native corporation or nonprofit, with on-chain governance and verifiable records, regardless of jurisdiction, passport, or starting capital.
HUB TEMPLATES
Hub corporation and Hub nonprofit templates cover different governance depths on the shared Hub. The catalog grows over time as new structures appear (for example DeFi market operators or CBDC settlement desks).
Hub corporation
Description: single-signer corporation with minimal roles. For: solo founders or owner-operators who want a clean cap table and simple authority.
Hub corporation
Description: small or LLC-style private corporation with standard governance. For: small teams running USDC-native operations with canonical wallets and tagged flows.
Hub corporation
Description: venture-grade governance with board approvals and pools. For: venture-backed teams needing structured approvals.
Hub corporation
Description: multi-class private corporation with advanced treasury policy. For: complex private groups with multi-entity structure.
Hub nonprofit
Description: board-governed nonprofit with a baseline allocation view. For: smaller NGOs seeking clear donation-to-program transparency.
Hub nonprofit
Description: board and committee governance with multi-program operations. For: nonprofits needing stronger oversight and program boundaries.
Hub nonprofit
Description: designated funds and umbrella program structures with selective disclosure. For: foundations, fiscal sponsors, and umbrella nonprofits with advanced allocation controls.
The Docs Center is the documentation reference and resource library for specs, policy, security, token, and implementation guidance.
Welcome
Start with scope, navigation, and the doc stack.
Whitepaper
Mid-length narrative of scope, design, and boundaries.
Whitepaper
Complete long-form rationale and design detail.
Specs
Normative protocol definitions, schemas, and conformance.
Policy
Decision process, upgrades, and protocol stewardship.
Security
Operational posture, disclosure, and incident response.
Token
DCHUB purpose, constraints, and economic guardrails.
Roadmap
High-level phases and planned milestones.
Legal
Disclaimers, risk disclosure, and structure notes.