By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Viral Trending contentViral Trending content
  • Home
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Celebrity
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Gaming News
  • Tech News
  • Travel
Reading: Crypto’s decentralization promise breaks at interoperability
Notification Show More
Viral Trending contentViral Trending content
  • Home
  • Categories
    • World News
    • Politics
    • Sports
    • Celebrity
    • Business
    • Crypto
    • Tech News
    • Gaming News
    • Travel
  • Bookmarks
© 2024 All Rights reserved | Powered by Viraltrendingcontent
Viral Trending content > Blog > Crypto > Crypto’s decentralization promise breaks at interoperability
Crypto

Crypto’s decentralization promise breaks at interoperability

By Viral Trending Content 8 Min Read
Share
SHARE

Contents
Crypto’s ideological UX failureCentralized gatekeepers control interoperabilityCrypto fragmentation and centralized interoperability fuel tribalism

Moving value across blockchains is now largely mediated by a small group of centralized intermediaries despite crypto’s long-standing claims of decentralization.

Michael Steuer, president and chief technology officer of Casper Network, framed this dynamic as a structural outcome of the industry’s approach to interoperability and user experience.

With a background spanning mobile gaming, enterprise software and early blockchain development, Steuer approaches the industry’s interoperability problem as a question of how real users interact with technology.

“For some reason, in crypto, it’s perfectly acceptable to ask users to care about things they would never think about in the real world,” he told Cointelegraph.

Moving value across chains requires investors to understand how bridges work or rely on centralized players that reintroduce risks crypto set out to eliminate, Steuer said. As a result, interoperability has been pushed into the hands of a small number of intermediaries.

Crypto’s ideological UX failure

For most users, interacting with crypto still requires an understanding of infrastructure that would be invisible in almost any other consumer technology.

Moving value often means choosing a network, confirming wallet compatibility, checking bridge support and accounting for fees and delays along the way.

Steuer said this expectation became normalized as the industry grew around early adopters who were willing to tolerate friction.

“We have to think beyond the early adopter and what’s acceptable to them to what’s acceptable to your mom, your dad and your neighbor,” Steuer said. “If this is supposed to be mass-market technology, we can’t expect everyone to think the way crypto natives do.”

Related: US crypto market structure bill in limbo as industry pulls support

In traditional payment systems, users make a simple choice, such as paying with cash or a card, while routing and settlement are handled in the background. A shopper does not decide how a transaction moves between banks or networks, and most errors can be reversed.

The stakes are higher in crypto. Major exchanges warn that assets sent over the wrong network — for example, sending tokens on Solana instead of Ethereum — may become permanently lost.

When assets need to move between blockchains, bridges often become the default path. Those bridges have evolved into critical infrastructure for interoperability, placing a small number of intermediaries at the center of how value moves across blockchains.

Bridges are also among the most fragile parts of the crypto stack, as they hold large pools of locked assets. Cross-chain bridges have been repeatedly targeted by hackers, accounting for some of the largest losses in crypto history. Chain hopping via bridges has also become a rising money laundering method by threat actors.

Centralized gatekeepers control interoperability

Bridges function as the user-facing interoperability layer, while at the infrastructure level, messaging and verification systems mediate cross-chain communication. Some mechanism must still determine whether a cross-chain transfer or message is valid and sufficiently finalized before it can be acted upon on the destination network.

These systems typically do not custody assets themselves, but they authorize which cross-chain messages are recognized by destination contracts and eligible for execution.

“Interoperability today is effectively centrally controlled by a handful of players like Chainlink, LayerZero and Axelar,” Steuer said. “They build and deploy their own cross-chain interfaces, decide which protocols are enabled and, ultimately, gatekeep who has access and who doesn’t.”

Related: How AI crypto trading will make and break human roles

Steuer said the issue is not that these systems exist, but that they have become unavoidable. When a small number of providers control how blockchains communicate, interoperability begins to resemble the same centralized chokepoints crypto was designed to avoid.

He argued that this concentration limits who can participate, making cross-chain activity dependent on infrastructure that operates outside the control of the underlying networks themselves.

At the same time, the concentration is partly a product of technical reality. Blockchains operate under different security assumptions, consensus models and execution environments, making native interoperability difficult to implement.

Messaging and verification layers emerged to solve that coordination problem, providing a shared mechanism for validating cross-chain events in the absence of common standards.

Crypto fragmentation and centralized interoperability fuel tribalism

The consequences of fragmented interoperability extend beyond infrastructure and into culture.

When users are forced to care about which network they are on, which wallet they use and which tools support their assets, loyalty to specific chains hardens into identity.

“You see this with the XRP army, the Bitcoin maximalists, the Ethereum crowd,” Steuer said. “That kind of tribalism doesn’t happen because users want it. It happens because the systems force people to choose sides.”

Networks compete as closed ecosystems rather than as interchangeable components of a broader system.

Steuer said that this tribalism is the result of users committing to specific networks in order to participate at all. Once assets, applications and communities are locked into particular chains, interoperability becomes a competitive weapon.

That dynamic makes it harder to design infrastructure that works universally, he said. Protocols are incentivized to protect their own ecosystems rather than reduce friction across them, even when doing so would benefit users.

Until blockchains can interact without exposing users to networks, wallets and bridges, Steuer said the industry will continue to reproduce the same fragmentation it set out to eliminate. Today, decentralization exists at the protocol level, but coordination, usability and power concentrate elsewhere, simultaneously reinforcing centralized infrastructure and tribal divisions.

Magazine: Here’s why crypto is moving to Dubai and Abu Dhabi

Cointelegraph Features and Cointelegraph Magazine publish long-form journalism, analysis and narrative reporting produced by Cointelegraph’s in-house editorial team and selected external contributors with subject-matter expertise. All articles are edited and reviewed by Cointelegraph editors in line with our editorial standards. Contributions from external writers are commissioned for their experience, research or perspective and do not reflect the views of Cointelegraph as a company unless explicitly stated. Content published in Features and Magazine does not constitute financial, legal or investment advice. Readers should conduct their own research and consult qualified professionals where appropriate. Cointelegraph maintains full editorial independence. The selection, commissioning and publication of Features and Magazine content are not influenced by advertisers, partners or commercial relationships.

You Might Also Like

US law firm files motion requesting redistribution of $344M USDt linked to Iran

KelpDAO: rsETH Records $936k Net Outflows One Month Post-Hack – Details

Strategy to repurchase $1.5B of 2029 convertible notes

Tether Urged To Transfer $344M In Frozen USDT To Terror Victims

£50,000 lawsuit filed against British Airways over a cut finger

TAGGED: Crypto, Crypto News, News
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link
Previous Article Bitcoin Cycle Far From Over — Here’s What’s Happening
Next Article Why It’s Hard to Run Venezuela
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

- Advertisement -
Ad image

Latest News

China's marriages drop to decade low, deepening demographic concerns
Business
US law firm files motion requesting redistribution of $344M USDt linked to Iran
Crypto
London police out in force as tens of thousands attend rival rallies
World News
KelpDAO: rsETH Records $936k Net Outflows One Month Post-Hack – Details
Crypto
A giant ‘cosmic laser’ just reached Earth after 8 billion years
World News
Sony Xperia 1 VIII AI Camera Assistant Internet Outrage
Tech News
Potato futures soar 700% in less than a month on Iran war speculation
Business

About Us

Welcome to Viraltrendingcontent, your go-to source for the latest updates on world news, politics, sports, celebrity, tech, travel, gaming, crypto news, and business news. We are dedicated to providing you with accurate, timely, and engaging content from around the globe.

Quick Links

  • Home
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Celebrity
  • Business
  • Home
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Celebrity
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Gaming News
  • Tech News
  • Travel
  • Sports
  • Crypto
  • Tech News
  • Gaming News
  • Travel

Trending News

cageside seats

Unlocking the Ultimate WWE Experience: Cageside Seats News 2024

Investing £5 a day could help me build a second income of £329 a month!

Brussels unveils plans for a European Degree but struggles to explain why

cageside seats
Unlocking the Ultimate WWE Experience: Cageside Seats News 2024
May 22, 2024
Investing £5 a day could help me build a second income of £329 a month!
March 27, 2024
Brussels unveils plans for a European Degree but struggles to explain why
March 27, 2024
Trump evokes more anger and fear from Democrats than Biden does from Republicans, AP-NORC poll shows
March 28, 2024
© 2024 All Rights reserved | Powered by Vraltrendingcontent
  • About Us
  • Contact US
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?