Overview
SyncGovHub is an AI-powered website that helps you make sense of how Cardano is governed. You can ask a plain-English question, such as which representatives hold the most voting power, and get a clear answer instead of sifting through raw blockchain records1. It brings together the people who vote, the proposals they vote on, and the results in one searchable place.
Cardano is a public blockchain whose holders vote on how the network is run and how its shared treasury is spent. SyncGovHub is built by SyncAI Network, a team making AI tools for that ecosystem2. The Cardano Foundation's own roundup of governance tools lists SyncAI as a platform that makes taking part easier3.
Key Features
- Ask questions in everyday language. Type a request like finding delegates with a certain amount of voting power, and SyncGovHub reads it and returns matching results, so you skip the technical query syntax1.
- Full profiles of the people who vote. Each delegate page shows their voting power, how many people back them, how often they take part, and their complete record on past proposals4.
- A guided view of every proposal. Browse and filter proposals by type, status, and date, then see how each group of voters responded, with a chat-style assistant to explain the details5.
- A dashboard for the big picture. Vote tallies, how support is spread across the community, and plain-language summaries of the reasons people gave are pulled into one analytics view6.
- A public connection for builders. Developers can plug the same governance data into their own apps through a hosted interface, secured with an access key and a daily request limit1.
What to Expect
Visitors land on a web app, still in its beta release, that opens onto Cardano's live governance activity. If you are new, you can explore representatives and proposals without an account and follow how a specific decision is unfolding. If you help run the network or vote on others' behalf, the tool surfaces the records and analytics you would otherwise have to assemble by hand.
Developers get a separate path: a documented, hosted interface that answers the same questions as the app, secured with a personal access key and capped to a set number of requests per day1. Because the project is early, some parts are still being built out, and the community links on the site may not always be current.
