ConstitutionDAO raised $47 million in Ethercryptocurrency, but lost to a bid of $43.2 million in the Sotheby's auction. The organizers of ConstitutionDAO believed that they would have had insufficient funding to "insure, store, and transport the document" if they had made a higher bid.[4]
The organizers said they would refund contributions, minus Ethereum fees.[4] Weeks after the event, around $23 million had yet to be refunded, partly due to these fees, with one contributor reported as having to pay $70 in fees to donate $200, and another $70 to get it refunded. The median contributor had donated $217 to the project,[5] and some fees were more than the value of the donation.[6]
The Verge put the group's effort in the lineage of Internet movements like the GameStop short squeeze earlier that year.[4]Bloomberg News wrote that the effort "showed the power of the DAO ... has the potential to change the way people buy things, build companies, share resources and run nonprofits."[7]
ConstitutionDAO2
Another group of crowdfunders named ConstitutionDAO2 formed in 2022 to purchase a different copy of the original constitution, which was to be auctioned by Sotheby's. The group had only publicly raised $313,000 by the time Sotheby's postponed its December 2022 auction,[8] though the organization had also raised private funds. The group considered an offer to buy another edition of the constitution from the same printing press.[9]