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The hats protocol is a hierarchical set of rights / privileges which are aggregated into roles (self-titled hats to indicate temporary nature). However LexDAO has a rather unusual use-case where a hackathon imports roles from RaidGuild (rogue=lawyer, scribe=legal scholar, fighter=full_stack dev, and mage=crypto smart contracts writer). Our objective is to foster H-shaped skills, ie dual rogue/mage. As part of training we set up a hackathon, a MIT-style dungeon crawl. However, the unique traits are that all rights are reset to the lowest level (of privilege) and you are forced to only use privileges of your opposite class ... eg rogues can only use mage skills.. This is to force participants to get out of their comfort zone and practice roles which they are not familiar with. The hats allows us to spec certain quests only for that role.
How can hats (or any other) protocol support this use-case?
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Use-case
The hats protocol is a hierarchical set of rights / privileges which are aggregated into roles (self-titled hats to indicate temporary nature). However LexDAO has a rather unusual use-case where a hackathon imports roles from RaidGuild (rogue=lawyer, scribe=legal scholar, fighter=full_stack dev, and mage=crypto smart contracts writer). Our objective is to foster H-shaped skills, ie dual rogue/mage. As part of training we set up a hackathon, a MIT-style dungeon crawl. However, the unique traits are that all rights are reset to the lowest level (of privilege) and you are forced to only use privileges of your opposite class ... eg rogues can only use mage skills.. This is to force participants to get out of their comfort zone and practice roles which they are not familiar with. The hats allows us to spec certain quests only for that role.
How can hats (or any other) protocol support this use-case?
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