Ethereum's Pivot to Proof-of-Stake Worries Users About Censorship
The
upcoming consensus change that Ethereum, the second largest cryptocurrency by
market cap, is planning to execute in September has worried many users about
the possibility of censorship happening at a protocol level. This means that,
even by interacting directly with smart contracts, blacklisted addresses would
not be able to transact or operate in the base layer.
Incoming Merge Event Triggers Worries in Crypto Circles
The
Merge, Ethereum’s migration from a proof-of-work (PoW) to a proof-of-stake
(PoS) consensus algorithm, has raised concerns about the future of the chain
when it comes to censorship. After the addresses of the smart contracts of
Tornado Cash, a privacy-centered mixing protocol, were sanctioned and
blacklisted by the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, the
privacy and censorship-resistant character of Ethereum have been in the
spotlight.
Gabriel
Shapiro, the general counselor at Delphi Digital, believes that big validators
of Ethereum will try to push for a measure that brings censorship to a protocol
level. This would allow them to operate in compliance with rules and also avoid
being penalized for not including illegal transactions. He stated these
entities "can’t self-help by merely avoiding facilitation of blocks
containing U.S.-sanctioned transactions because, under certain conditions, they
might be dramatically slashed from doing so."
Discusfish,
Co-Founder of F2pool, an Ethereum and Bitcoin mining pool operation, stated
that proof-of-work (PoW) consensus assets were more capable of dealing with
regulatory pressure than their proof-of-stake-based counterparts. He explained:
"In
the discussion about PoS and PoW under regulatory pressure these days, there is
one key point to pay attention to whether the block producer can remain
anonymous and package some transactions that conform to the consensus on the
chain (which may contain some sensitive transactions). PoW can currently do it.
PoS currently has certain difficulties because of the need to stake the assets
on the chain.
Different Points of View
Some
think that proof-of-stake consensus-based assets, such as Ethereum after The
Merge happens, are better prepared to face a censorship attack coming from
government regulators. One of them is Justin Bons, Founder and CIO of
Cybercapital.
Bons
argues that while an attack of this nature would be very difficult to pull off
against Bitcoin and Ethereum, the complexity and the physical presence that PoW-based
chains need to operate would make them easier to target than proof-of-stake
assets. That’s because PoS can be operated with low-power equipment from any
place in the world.
Finally,
Bons believes that regulators are not out to hurt cryptocurrencies
yet and that "a sane middle ground must be found which preserves the
credible neutrality of blockchains, ensuring privacy for individuals and
compliance for companies."
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