The Good Tech Companies - How Crypto is Getting Centralized (and What We Can Do About It)
Episode Date: November 27, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/how-crypto-is-getting-centralized-and-what-we-can-do-about-it. Crypto was built to be free f...rom middlemen, yet power is slowly concentrating again. Here’s how centralization sneaks in, and how we can push back. Check more stories related to web3 at: https://hackernoon.com/c/web3. You can also check exclusive content about #decentralization, #crypto-adoption, #cryptocurrency-investment, #crypto-exchange, #blockchain-governance, #good-company, #crypto-infrastructure, #obyte, and more. This story was written by: @obyte. Learn more about this writer by checking @obyte's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Decentralization isn’t just a fancy buzzword to sell digital products, it’s the principle that makes crypto worth trusting in the first place. When no single entity controls the system, no gatekeeper can decide who participates or who gets blocked.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This audio is presented by Hacker Noon, where anyone can learn anything about any technology.
How crypto is getting centralized, and what we can do about it, by Obite.
Let's remember that centralization occurs when one or a few entities control a platform or service
from behind the scenes. This can, and has, created its own set of problems.
Without decentralization, we risk repeating the failures of traditional finance,
with gatekeepers, censorship, and single points of failure. Yet over time, part
Parts of crypto's infrastructure are drifting towards centralized control.
What began as permissionless, open systems are increasingly shaped by dominant actors in key layers.
The question becomes, how do we notice when centralization eyes creeping in, and how can we push
back, even with modest steps, why decentralization still matters?
Decentralization isn't just a fancy buzzword to sell digital products.
It's the principle that makes crypto worth trusting in the first place.
When no single entity controls the system, no gatekeeper can decide who participates or who gets
blocked.
That means users can transfer value, publish data, or build tools without asking for permission.
It's freedom, but in network form.
When control concentrates in a few hands, then freedom starts to fade.
A centralized exchange, like Coinbase or Binance, can freeze withdrawals for any reason,
a dominant, validator, or group of validators in a proof of stake, POSP, net,
network consensor transactions. A government can pressure a single operator or a small group of
operators instead of thousands. In those potential scenarios, decentralization stops being a theory
and becomes protection. It's what allows crypto to keep functioning even when politics, outages,
or business failures strike. From a financial angle, decentralization also spreads risk. When a system
Hosmani independent actors verifying and storing data, a single failure doesn't take everything down.
It's like weaving a net instead of stretching a single thread. If one strand snaps, the rest
still hold together. Finally, decentralization nurtures innovation. Open participation means new
developers can propose upgrades or create alternatives without seeking approval from a monopoly.
The explosion of new chains and applications was possible precisely because no one was in charge of
permissioning innovation. That freedom is what gave crypto its creative spark, and losing it would
dim the entire ecosystem. Where centralization is appearing today, despite the ideals, centralization
is quietly running in several layers of crypto. Custodial exchanges still hold a great portion
of user funds, concentrating financial control in a handful of platforms. If those platforms
face pressure from regulators or suffer downtime, the effects could ripple across millions of users,
as it happened with the downfall of FTX. It's an irony that a movement built to remove middlemen
now leans on a few massive intermediaries. Another clear sign of centralization creeping into
crypto is validator censorship. In theory, every transaction should have an equal chance of being
processed, but in practice, validators can, and sometimes do, exclude transactions they consider,
risky, or politically inconvenient. After the U.S. sanctioned Tornado Cash in 2022, many ath
Ethereum, validators, began rejecting transactions linked to it to comply with regulations, for
instance. Since validators, who are actually block builders, decide what gets included, nearly
half of Ethereum's blocks excluded such transactions at some point, showing how fragile
decentralization becomes when middlemen can silence parts of a network. And this happens
because the network was designed that way. And there are more place where definitely seeing
more centralization in crypto now than five years ago. For example,
Institutional actors are holding huge chunks of the market. One report says that over 30% of
all Bitcoin supply is now controlled by treasuries, ETFs and public companies. And that's not to
mention the next U.S. Bitcoin Reserve, established this year by the Trump's administration.
Large companies are also piling into crypto in a way we didn't see before. Corporations now hold
roughly 855,000 BTC, or around 4% of Bitcoin's supply. On the recent quarters, their accumulations have
outpaced ETFs. This might not be so bad in Bitcoin with its proof of work consensus. However,
in proof of stake networks like Ethereum and Solana, ownership translates to direct control of
what's allowed to be included in blocks, and it's rapidly concentrating in these networks too.
These moves not only shift influence toward fewer actors, but Ossumann decision-making and market
influence lean more toward institutions Thambrode networks of users. Even Defi is not immune. A report
from the bank for international settlements shows that behind the appearance of openness, control often
sits with a limited set of token holders, usually from venture capital companies. They can even
collude to alter decentralized apps for financial gain. Andresen Horowitz, a 16 Z, a major VC in
crypto, has been accused of this several times. In short, if a supposedly decentralized platform
doesn't have enough participants, or if those participants hand over custody of their assets or votes to an
intermediary, it will stay as centralized as a small bank. How to spot centralization? Spotting
centralization doesn't require deep technical skills. It starts with asking who controls what.
If a service keeps the private keys, it's in charge of your funds. If a network relies on a small
handful of validators or servers, it's more fragile than it looks. And if decisions come from a
closed circle, the project may already be centralized in practice, no matter how decentralized it claims
to be. A few simple checks can reveal a lot. Look at how many independent validators or nodes are
active, and, even more importantly, how much they can control at the end of the day. If two or
three entities dominate and have broad powers, that's a sign of imbalance. Examined governance
forums or websites to see who proposes and passes updates. Transparency is a good indicator.
Open discussions suggest power is distributed. Silence from the top often means otherwise.
The architecture itself can offer clues.
Obite, for example, uses a directed acyclic graph, DAG, instead of a blockchain, spreading validation
across users rather than relying on miners or stakers.
Its order providers, ops, can't approve or reject transactions.
They only create waypoints that are used toward them, while underscore underscore underscore on chain
governance underscore underscore underscore is available to all users.
Still, even in systems like Obite, vigilance is needed to ensure that influence doesn't cluster
among a few active holders.
Some steps to avoid centralization.
Avoiding the risks of centralization doesn't require turning into a hardcore cipher punk overnight.
Small steps matter.
The first is self-custody.
When we hold our own private keys, even on just a piece of paper, we remove an entire layer of dependency.
We can still use exchanges for trading, but large balances should live in wallets we can
In OBIT, users can create a simple text coin as a cold and self-custodial wallet, for instance.
Running or supporting independent full nodes is another underrated act of decentralization.
All networks offer guides for doing this, and even lighterful nodes, like pruned nodes in Bitcoin,
help strengthen network resilience and your own autonomy.
Depending on the network, the requirements may not be a lot either.
Transparencies should also be rewarded.
Decentralized projects should publish their code.
and governance proposals for everyone, even if not everyone as a programmer.
Other community members will analyze this data and share their findings. The more visible a system
is, the easier it becomes to avoid hidden centralization. And finally, community participation matters,
joining discussions, proposing governance changes, or voting on them keeps teams accountable.
The healthier a community's involvement is, the harder it is for control to concentrate
unnoticed. Trade-offs and realistic expectations. Complete decentralization is hard, and that's okay.
Systems that distribute power often sacrifice speed or simplicity. Self-custody shifts responsibility
to the user, and smaller, validators, can face reliability issues. Still, these inconveniences are
the price of independence. We also need to accept that some centralization has value.
Exchanges simplify fiat on ramps and centralized relays can help coordinate complex systems.
Thecky is to rely on them wisely. Keep only what's needed on centralized platforms, secure the rest yourself, and always have an exit path. The difference between dependence and convenience is preparation. Progress happens incrementally. When we choose decentralized services, set you poor own nodes, or speak up about governance concentration, we nudge the system back toward its original vision. Decentralization isn't built overnight, and it's never granted. It's a continuous balance between usability and resilience.
In the end, avoiding an excess of centralization is about cultivating good habits.
A healthy crypto ecosystem depends on millions of users making small, conscious choices that
keep power distributed rather than concentrated.
By staying alert and sharing responsibility, we ensure that the open, borderless spirit
that gave birth to crypto stays alive, not just in code, but in the way we use it.
Featured Vector Image by Vector Juice, Freepig thank you for listening to this hackernoon story,
read by artificial intelligence.
Visit hackernoon.com to read, write, learn and publish.
