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Vitalik Buterin Urges Stronger Decentralization to Curb Crypto Power

Key Highlights Buterin warns crypto projects must scale without centralizing power, or they risk becoming like the systems they were meant to replace. Ethereum founders think that decentralization in crypto...

Vitalik Buterin Urges Stronger Decentralization to Curb Crypto Power

Key Highlights

  • Buterin warns crypto projects must scale without centralizing power, or they risk becoming like the systems they were meant to replace.
  • Ethereum founders think that decentralization in crypto is not just technical; governance must prevent power from concentrating in a few hands.
  • Crypto needs decentralization models, not just business models, to avoid control shifting to a small group as projects grow.

In a recent essay titled ‘Balance of Power,’ Ethereum Co-Founder Vitalik Buterin explored the risks of concentrated power in both society and technology, emphasizing the need for decentralization in the cryptocurrency ecosystem. While the essay covers broad social and economic ideas, its message is especially important for the crypto world.

The essence of Buterin’s warning is simple: as crypto projects expand, they risk being the same as the systems they set out to challenge. A blockchain may appear decentralized, but if a small group controls decisions, influence, or infrastructure, it no longer functions as a truly community-driven network. 

The concentration of power in crypto

Many crypto projects are based on growth through capital raise, usage, and market dominance. Although such success is largely viewed positively, growth may silently introduce centralization even within decentralized systems, according to Buterin.

“More projects should explicitly think about not just a business model—how they bring in resources to support the work that they are doing—but also a decentralization model—how they avoid concentrating power in themselves, and the risks associated with having such power,” he writes.

As an example, Buterin points to Lido, one of Ethereum’s largest staking providers, which controls around 24% of staked ETH. However, he stated that Lido is actually a DAO, which includes multiple node operators and is structured in such a way as not to give any particular group excessive control. It’s also interesting to see that the definition of decentralization can mean more than just the allocation of tokens and infrastructure. 

Decentralization as a moral and strategic imperative

For Buterin, decentralization represents much more than a technological design decision. It is both a moral imperative and a necessity. History repeatedly suggests that when governments and corporations gain too much control, the result often tends to affect ordinary people. Crypto, in his opinion, must not repeat the same mistakes. 

He distinguishes between two types of power. “Power to” is the ability to act, build, and create impact. “Power over” is the ability to control or restrict others. A healthy decentralized system should maximize the first while minimizing the second. This shapes his view on crypto governance. The blockchain network must allow people to participate and innovate, and no individual or group should control it. 

Lessons from society and technology

Buterin pulls in lessons from large corporations-a homogenization and “soullessness” risk. Two forces, commonality of motive and commonality of agency, work toward centralization. Large companies, often profit-driven and controlled by a small coalition, exert immense influence over markets, culture, and infrastructure. Crypto projects focused only on growth without attention to governance risk are the same.

At this extent, investor pressure can make things worse. Many startups start off with idealistic intentions, but the pressure from investors to deliver quick returns scales projects in ways that weaken decentralization. When investors have stakes in several projects, they may be implicitly encouraging them to act as one large entity.

Diffusion as a strategy against centralization

To resist this kind of trend, Buterin favors diffusion—a spread of knowledge, tools, and control rather than a lock-up situation. In crypto, this can include:

  • Open protocols that allow anyone to interact with or build on the network without needing specialized permission.
  • “Copyleft” licenses require derivative works to be open and freely available.
  • Interoperability standards allow various networks, apps, or platforms to communicate.

He also advocates adversarial interoperability, allowing users and developers to access platforms without seeking approval. In crypto, this includes decentralized exchanges, independent wallets, and alt-clients. Simply creating value should not give someone control.

Outside of crypto, other examples of forceful diffusion that Buterin gives include Sci-Hub, which is a network that distributes scientific papers for free.

Buterin also highlights diversity, drawing on ideas from Glen Weyl and Audrey Tang. Pluralism enables cooperative action despite differences. In crypto, this is achieved through multi-stakeholder DAOs that share decision-making.

He speaks of d/acc, or defensive acceleration, which aims to create open, defensive technologies that diminish the need for central control. If the systems can mutually defend themselves, then they will be less reliant on central control for security and stability.

The broader context: Balancing societal power

Buterin’s work provides context for cryptocurrencies in society, warning against the negative consequences that can result from excessive control exercised by “Big Business, Big Government, and Big Mob.” 

When any particular force achieves dominance, “innovation and diversity become difficult.” But cryptocurrencies, he explains, create the opportunity for experimenting with new methods for balance.

Furthermore, he points to the significance of the role of civil society, the ‘Fourth Estate,’ in balancing the use of power. This is tempered in the world of crypto by the use of decentralized systems to provide balance in terms of avoiding the monopoly of influence.

What this means for crypto users

For users, the message is quite simple from Buterin’s perspective. The matter of governance is as important as token economics. A project that focuses on decentralization as a key aspect is more robust and aligned with the initial vision of blockchain.

Open access, shared control, and shared decision-making serve as a guarantee of fairness and robustness of the networks. In simple terms, Buterin believes people should aim to contribute and make an impact without taking over. The goal is to empower others, not to control the system. 

Conclusion

The ‘Balance of Power’ essay is a reminder that decentralization is not a default-it has to be actively protected. As blockchain networks start scaling, they need to be conscious of governance models that diffuse authority, promote pluralism, and prevent the domination of any one actor.

With the focus on diffusion, interoperability, and joint governance, crypto projects can grow responsibly by staying true to the inspiration that led to this ecosystem in the first place.

Also Read: Vitalik Buterin Argues for Human-Centric AI Lab Charter


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