visit
1- Let's consider if it gets distributed equally
Suppose all 50 projects are eligible for fixed grantProject 50 - 500
There can also be a cap on max amount raised, such as no project can get more than say 30% of total grant or a fixed amount say 20k because without cap results can be like
Project 4 to project 50 - 500
Fixed grant can be variable also, instead of fixing a percentage of total or a fixed sum, fixed grant can itself be put as grant and go through CLR matching, so total grants will become now 51Suppose Fixed grant amassed 20k in CLR matching , so instead of 25k now 20k will be distributed as fixed grant --
Project 51- 400 ( 20k distributed equally to 50 projects)
What will happen when projects will keep increasing but grants don't increase in same proportion, remains constant or decreasesThat's where eligibility come - All old projects will be monitored on per month or 3 months (whatever suits) basis etc and any ineligible project will lose fixed funding. It will get only CLR matching or none. Some reasons for ineligibility can be - 1- Already got very good funding in last rounds and will not require further fixed funding for quite a time, they can be included back when need arise2- They have not fulfilled the projects roadmap or community does not want to continue with this project ( it's a scam or progress is slow or no work) Also it has to be make sure that if any of the projects are capable of generating revenue or profit they have to put a part(in percentage or fixed) of that back in to the grants, so as to keep increasing grants pool. Neverthless CLR Quadratic funding is a great experiment and can prove to be a great sustainable funding model if successful.