I've been on Hive since the Steemit days back in 2018. I've built things on this chain, I've helped fun things on this chain, and I've watched a lot of HBD flow out of the DHF into projects over the years. Some of those projects are genuinely important. Some of them I have questions about. But here's the thing that bothers me across the board: I can't tell you where the money is actually going for almost any of them.
This is a blockchain. Transparency is supposed to be the whole point.
The Cost of Building Software Has Collapsed
Before I get into specifics, let me set some context. It is 2026. The cost of building and shipping software has fallen off a cliff. AI coding tools like Claude Code and Codex can scaffold entire applications in hours. Cloud hosting is dirt cheap. A basic VPS costs a few dollars a month. You can run serious infrastructure on a $200 mini PC sitting under your desk or a $40 a month VPS.
I know this because I do it. I've shipped HivePredict, HiveHand, HiveDice, Hivett, WordHive, and a bunch of open-source tools in a relatively short period. I'm one guy. I'm not saying this to brag. I'm saying this because when I see proposals asking for hundreds of HBD per day and the deliverables are a single application with modest infrastructure requirements, the math stops making sense to me unless someone shows me the breakdown.
It's always, "we need money, here's a vague roadmap of things we probably won't deliver 100%, thx" not, "we need money, here's our business plan, projected costs, expenses"
What I Want To See
I'm not asking anyone to dox their personal finances. I'm asking for something basic that any funded project should be providing:
How much goes to salaries or contractor payments, and for how many people? What are the actual infrastructure costs, servers, domains, APIs, third-party services? What percentage is going to development versus maintenance versus operations? Is there a surplus, and if so, what happens to it?
That's it. That's the bar. And almost nobody clears it.
Let's Talk About Some Numbers
Actifit is pulling in 230 HBD a day. That is roughly $7,000 a month. For a step counter app that ties into the Hive blockchain. What are the server costs? How many developers are actively working on it? What does the roadmap look like? I genuinely don't know.
VSC/Magi is getting 1,151 HBD a day. That is over $31,000 a month. Now, to be fair, VSC is an ambitious project. Smart contracts, cross-chain bridges, the whole deal. The scope justifies a bigger budget. But even ambitious projects should be publishing quarterly expense reports. If you're spending $31K a month of community funds, show the community where it goes.
It also makes you question is the value being invested being returned? It's hard to quantify. But is that 1,151 HBD per day resulting in a bare minimum 1,151 HBD return back to the Hive ecosystem? Considering HIVE currently ranks 507 on Coinmarketcap, I'm going to go out on a limb and say no.
Hive Keychain is at 600 HBD a day. That is $18,000 a month. Keychain is absolutely critical infrastructure for Hive. Most if not all dApp's use it. The browser extension, the mobile app, multisig work. I'm not questioning whether Keychain deserves DHF funding. It does. But 600 HBD a day is a serious number, and the proposal should come with a clear breakdown. How many developers? How many hours? What are the infrastructure costs? Keychain started at 100 HBD a day, then went to 200, then 300, and now it's at 600. That is a 6x increase over the life of the project. I'd love to see a corresponding 6x increase in transparency about where those funds land.
HiveBuzz is getting 150 HBD a day. That is about $4,500 a month for a gamification layer. Badges, rankings, power-up challenges. It's cool. People enjoy it. But most of the heavy lifting here is done by the blockchain itself. HiveBuzz is reading chain data and awarding badges based on it. What are the actual compute costs for that? What is the team size? Is 150 HBD a day mostly salary for one or two people? Just tell us.
Hive Analytics at the daily rate it's asking for seems like a luxury expense in 2026. Analytics dashboards are not hard to build anymore. The data is all on-chain. What justifies the ongoing cost?
Worldmappin seems excessively funded for what it delivers. A map-based content layer is a neat idea, but the funding level raises eyebrows when you can't see the expense breakdown. I don't see anyone talking about it (and I don't say that to talk down on it either).
And then there's the recent proposal to fund Claude Code licences for Hive developers. Look, I use AI coding tools every day. They're transformative. But without any accountability mechanism or way to prove the tools are being used for Hive development, you're going to see people in countries where these tools are expensive luxuries using funded licences to do freelance work that has nothing to do with Hive. That's not cynicism, that's just reality. If you hand someone a $200/month tool with no strings attached, some percentage of them are going to use it for whatever pays the bills. A proposal like this needs hard accountability baked in from the start or it's just a subsidy program with Hive branding on it.
Even YouTubers Do This
Linus Sebastian from Linus Tech Tips, a YouTuber with no obligation to anyone except his audience and advertisers, has done public breakdowns of how Linus Media Group spends its money. He showed revenue splits, explained that his company has paid out more in salaries than the $26 million it earned from AdSense, and published pie charts breaking down income by source. He did this voluntarily because he understood that transparency builds trust.
If a YouTuber can do that for his viewers, DHF-funded projects can do it for the stakeholders whose money they're spending.
The DHF Is Not A Salary Fund
One of the patterns I keep seeing in the Hive ecosystem is proposals that function as indefinite salary programs. The project launches, gets funded, and then the proposal just renews every year at the same or higher rate with no exit strategy and no path to self-sustainability.
The DHF should function more like a startup incubator. You come in with a plan, you get funded, you build, and within a reasonable timeframe you either become self-sustaining or you wind down. Perpetual funding with no accountability and no transparency is not how you build a healthy ecosystem. It's how you build a bureaucracy.
What Good Transparency Looks Like
It doesn't have to be complicated. A quarterly post on Hive with a simple table:
Salaries/contractors: X HBD, Y people, Z hours per week. Infrastructure: X HBD, broken down by service. Development: what was built, what was maintained, what's planned. Surplus: how much was left over and what happened to it.
That's it. Post it on-chain. Let people see it. Let people ask questions about it. This is a blockchain. The whole thesis is that transparency and verifiability are better than trust-me-bro. So let's actually live that out.
I'm Not Trying To Kill Anyone's Funding
I want to be clear: I'm not writing this to attack any specific project or person. Most of these projects provide real value to Hive. Some of them are essential (in my opinion). But the absence of transparent expense reporting is a problem across the board, and it erodes trust over time.
When you can't tell the difference between a well-run project that needs every dollar it receives and a project that's coasting on auto-renewed funding while pocketing the surplus, something is broken. Transparent reporting fixes that. It protects good projects by proving they deserve the funding, and it exposes bad ones by making the numbers speak for themselves.
The DHF belongs to Hive stakeholders. The least they deserve is a receipt.