2. Is it possible to change that?

There might be a way.

The easiest way to explain the idea of an ICO is to liken it to an Initial Public Offering, or IPO However, unlike an IPO, an ICO doesn’t necessarily confer ownership rights on buyers of the ICO tokens. In essence, while buying a share of a company during an IPO would mean that one owns a unit ownership in the company, buying a token during an ICO doesn’t give you any form of ownership nor voting right. What this means is that there is no clearly stated procedure for how a Blockchain startup will distribute its profits among token holders in form of dividends. In most cases, ICO is an invitation to put your money into an idea, hope that it will be adopted hence, seeing the value of the token rise on increased demands. This contributes a big deal to why crypto tokens are volatile.

Corporate structures as we know them today are going to be reshaped into DAOs. The DAO had an objective to provide a new decentralised business model for enterprises. Seeing that traditional investors are already used to invest in a company for an ownership stake, the challenge is to help them better understand the shift of paradigm to DAO and tokens. This is exactly what Swissborg is doing. With a token like the CHSB, active token holders will participate in referendums to receive a share of the revenue generated by the DAO.