• News
    • Bitcoin
    • Altcoins
    • Blockchain
    • DeFi
    • Regulation
    • Scams
  • NFT
  • Metaverse
  • Analysis
  • Learn
  • Videos
  • Blogs
  • Market Cap
  • Shop
What's Hot

Automated Swaps and No-Code API Integration

2026-05-13

What Is Parabolic SAR in Crypto: How PSAR Works

2026-05-13

What Is ADX in Crypto? Average Directional Index Explained

2026-05-13

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

Facebook Twitter Instagram
Crypto Investor News Network
  • News
    • Bitcoin
    • Altcoins
    • Blockchain
    • DeFi
    • Regulation
    • Scams
  • NFT

    Bitcoin Just Hit an All-Time High. Nobody Cares

    2025-09-11

    All Eyes on Art: Upcoming Collections to Watch the Week of May 27

    2025-09-11

    Bitcoin Vegas Belongs to the Suits Now

    2025-09-11

    NFC Summit Lisbon Founder on Evolving the Event and Weathering the Market

    2025-09-11

    All Eyes on Art: Upcoming Collections to Watch the Week of June 3

    2025-09-10
  • Metaverse

    Shib: The Metaverse – Part of the Expanding Shiba Inu Ecosystem

    2025-01-03

    Experience to Earn: Everdome’s Metaverse Frontier

    2024-12-30

    Beyond Bots: Meta Motivo and the Dawn of Humanlike Digital Life

    2024-12-13

    Exploring NetVRk: What Is Behind This AI-Driven Virtual Universe?

    2024-10-28

    Council of Europe Highlights Metaverse’s Impact on Privacy and Democracy

    2024-09-05
  • Analysis

    Crypto Exchange Coinbase Lists New DeFi Altcoin Project Built on Base Blockchain

    2023-12-13

    Ethereum Price Bears Keep Pushing, Why Decline Isn’t Over Yet

    2023-12-13

    Trader Bullish on Cosmos (ATOM), Says One Dogecoin Rival Setting Up for Next Leg Up – Here’s His Outlook

    2023-12-13

    AVAX Price Pumps 50% and Dumps 15%, Why Uptrend Is Still Strong

    2023-12-13

    Top Trader Predicts Parabolic Rally for Solana Competitor – Here’s His Upside Target

    2023-12-13
  • Learn

    Automated Swaps and No-Code API Integration

    2026-05-13

    What Is Parabolic SAR in Crypto: How PSAR Works

    2026-05-13

    What Is ADX in Crypto? Average Directional Index Explained

    2026-05-13

    Mean Reversion Trading: Crypto Strategies & Risks

    2026-05-12

    What Are Moving Averages in Crypto? SMA, EMA & Signals

    2026-05-12
  • Videos

    Ray Dalio Says Central Banks WON’T Touch Bitcoin — He’s Dead Wrong

    2026-05-12

    Dumping BTC for AI?! 🤯 Agentic ETH, Massive Flows & Levge + AI Masterplan! 🚀

    2026-05-12

    This mean $320,000 BTC by Dec 2026!

    2026-05-12

    Bitcoin Just Flashed Its First Bull Signal Since 2023

    2026-05-12

    Bitcoin Investors…Banks are Worried

    2026-05-11
  • Blogs
  • Market Cap
  • Shop
Facebook Twitter Instagram TikTok
Crypto Investor News Network
Home»Blockchain»As Blockchains Push Toward Decentralization, These People Serve as Ultimate Guardians
Blockchain

As Blockchains Push Toward Decentralization, These People Serve as Ultimate Guardians

2024-01-29No Comments6 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Trust the humans.

That principle stands at the core of a new trend in the blockchain industry, where overseers of various networks are establishing groups of people to help steer protocol changes and ensure security.

The goal of these “protocol councils,” sometimes called “security councils,” is to nudge the nascent networks toward increasing decentralization, by gradually removing them from under the control of their original developers. Before cutting the cord completely, where the networks essentially run automatically, or subject to some sort of democratic process, the thinking is that a panel of well-meaning humans can serve as the ultimate guardians – able to step in quickly when emergencies arise, or providing the final sign-off on major protocol changes.

One can be forgiven for the cynicism: Aren’t these distributed ledgers supposed to decentralize everything? There’s also sighs (or even groans) over the observation that the blockchain industry already is filled with groups of people, seemingly created out of thin-air, that often have very little purpose other than for members to brag that they are on some kind of board.

The projects argue that these protocol councils are a necessity as the industry matures.

Polygon, the Ethereum layer-2 network, has a 13-person “Protocol Council.” Arbitrum, another major Ethereum-focused layer-2, has a “Security Council,” while Optimism also has a “Security Council.”

“This is a necessary evil,” Mehdi Zerouali, the director of Sigma Prime, a blockchain security firm, said in an interview. He serves on Polygon’s council. “Obviously we’re still trusting that group of 13 people not to collude. I could potentially be pulling off like this campaign where I’m like, reaching out privately, and then convincing everyone to sneak in a bug and sharing the proceeds with them. That is a risk.”

See also  LAMINA1 forms an exclusive collaboration with Interverse

“This is why those 13 people are public facing people that have a strong reputation in the Ethereum space that are already trusted by Ethereum users,” Zerouali added.

What is the protocol council?

Polygon formed its protocol council in October, with the express mandate to oversee any major or emergency changes to the core protocol. The members on the team are leading figures in the Ethereum ecosystem, and are tasked with executing “the community-led process to initiate future upgrades,” according to a blog post.

Those tasks are really broken down into two types of scenarios: first, regular protocol upgrades, such as adding new or removing features to the blockchain; and second, if there is an immediate threat to the protocol itself; in those situations, the group can bypass the traditional governance framework.

For non-emergency updates, the council follows similar processes as other protocols. On Polygon, anyone can submit a Polygon Improvement Proposal (PIP), which then goes through a governance and community process. Once consensus is reached, members of the council, the “signers,” are responsible for triggering the change.

That’s done through a multi-signature safe, a type of crypto wallet that requires several private keys to sign off in order for smart contracts to perform certain tasks. During a regular protocol change, Polygon needs seven of the 13 members to sign off, while in an emergency, they need 10 council members.

“Our responsibility is making sure that the governance proposals are matching the specification, making sure that what we’re about to push to the chain is exactly what’s been described in the PIP,” Zerouali said. “And then once we’re comfortable with that, there’s a bit of due diligence that’s involved for the 13 parties. And once the 13 parties are OK with what they’ve seen, then, you know, it’s about approving a specific transaction through a safe multisig.”

See also  Bitcoin's Greatest Asset: The People

‘Training wheels’ for decentralization

The goal for this council is to be an interim step toward decentralization – in having the protocol control itself through code, running automatically as it were – in keeping with the will of a community of network users.

Having the councils is akin to using “training wheels,” Georgios Konstantopoulos, chief technology officer at the crypto-focused venture capital firm Paradigm, told CoinDesk in an interview. They’re “something that you use to prevent something bad from happening.”

“Ethereum consensus is controlled by code. We have the Beacon Chain and it took us seven years to fully get there,” said Jerome de Tychey, the creator of EthCC and another member of Polygon’s protocol council. “So I guess it will take less than that for Polygon to reach that kind of maturity.”

Arbitrum’s security council is made up of 12 members, who are elected through the Arbitrum DAO. The council is divided into two groups, and every six months, elections are held to fill those seats. According to a blog post from the Arbitrum DAO, no more than three candidates from the same organization can sit on the security council at the same time.

Optimism’s security council also operates in a similar vein to Polygon’s. According to a blog post, Optimism’s security for its mainnet is also dependent on a multisig (multi-signature) wallet, though Optimism stated that members on the council who have access to the multisig are anonymous. “Members are anonymous in order to make the multisig more difficult to compromise.”

The councils are touted as an alternative to other governance structures short of full decentralization, such as the “foundations” that oversee many blockchain projects.

See also  Push Protocol Drops Wallet-to-wallet Video Chatting Feature

“On other protocols, you still have the foundation, controlling close to 100% of the governance of the protocol. L2s, where I guess the security model is very explicit: We trust the foundation,” Zerouali said. “That foundation can potentially be acting in ways that aren’t necessarily aligned with its community.”

The other end of the spectrum is where the protocols are resilient and robust when it comes to bugs or protocol changes. “This is a utopia, as of today, particularly when we deal with ZK technology that’s relatively new, untested, and certainly hasn’t gone through the test of time over the past few years,” Zerouali said.

“That side of the spectrum is not really an option for ZK protocols, zkEVMs, at the moment, just because of A) the very high risk of code bugs to be introduced on various different layers, the provers, the sequencers, the contracts themselves, and B) the need for constant upgrades.” These elements of the blockchain architecture could be prone to failure.

“So for emerging L2 technologies, like Optimism, Arbitrum, zkEVMs, when they go live, they go live on something that has been battle tested, but not battle tested to be in the wild, with tons of different things,” de Tychey told CoinDesk.

“That’s why those technologies tend to rely on councils to provide insight on taking care of different things that maybe the implementers didn’t think of, or finger pointing on incentive directions that weren’t weren’t explored a part of the audits of the new implementation, and so on,” de Tychey said.

Read more: Polygon Proposes Council for ‘Decentralized Governance,’ Names 13 Members

blockchains decentralization Guardians people Push serve Ultimate
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

The ULTIMATE 2026 Crypto Portfolio STRATEGY!!

2026-01-11

Crypto Prediction Markets Are Expected To Double In 2026! Here’s Why People Love Them!

2026-01-07

BITCOIN Is Now The ONLY Hope For Young People!!

2025-12-17

⚡ Sell TSLA for SpaceX?! The Ultimate Elon Faceoff! 🚀🔥

2025-12-10
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts
Videos

5 Takeaways From Filming The Next Crypto Gem TV Show

2023-04-03

In this video, I recap my week long filming of the The Next Crypto Gem…

Videos

Easy Ways To Get Your Bitcoin Off The Exchange

2024-04-12

Get access to the live classes, paid course, and Bitcoin forum here: https://www.bitcoinuniversity.com/join Join and…

Blockchain

Cardano Founder Eyes Partnership with Kraken for New Layer-2 Blockchain Project

2023-11-12

Charles Hoskinson, the founder of Cardano, has expressed interest in partnering with Kraken, a major…

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news and Update from CINN about Crypto, Metaverse and NFT.

Editors Picks

Automated Swaps and No-Code API Integration

2026-05-13

What Is Parabolic SAR in Crypto: How PSAR Works

2026-05-13

What Is ADX in Crypto? Average Directional Index Explained

2026-05-13

Mean Reversion Trading: Crypto Strategies & Risks

2026-05-12
Crypto Investor News Network
Facebook Twitter Instagram TikTok
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Disclouser
© 2026 - All rights are reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

bitcoin
Bitcoin (BTC) $ 79,498.00
ethereum
Ethereum (ETH) $ 2,263.32
tether
Tether (USDT) $ 0.999547
bnb
BNB (BNB) $ 675.27
xrp
XRP (XRP) $ 1.43
usd-coin
USDC (USDC) $ 0.999745
solana
Solana (SOL) $ 91.12
tron
TRON (TRX) $ 0.349456
figure-heloc
Figure Heloc (FIGR_HELOC) $ 1.04
staked-ether
Lido Staked Ether (STETH) $ 2,265.05