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by eaurouge 755 days ago
> Institutions will stake their tokens and have disproportionate voice in the consensus

It's incredibly unlikely institutions will ever own enough ETH to have a disproportionately large share of the token supply, even as a collective. The cost of ETH would rise increasingly as any entity gains more ownership, such that what you're describing would become prohibitively expensive.

In any case, as hanniabu stated, this is not how Ethereum's proof of stake works. Mere token ownership doesn't give you a say on protocol consensus. You would need to run validator nodes, and control 51% of staked tokens. And as noted earlier, that second step would cost you north of $200B (theoretically) in today's numbers, likely north of a trillion in practical terms.

Editing to add:

> Yeah, not sure it was possible given the incentives.

It's a decentralized network. No one entity gets to determine what any other entity does with their tokens, so long as it's legal. That really is the point.

1 comments

Are you telling me you think it's not realistic that the sum of all US institutions will own >50% of the tokens? I think that's quite likely.
They could do an anti-institution hard fork, that adds a built in mixer that would be illegal for institutions to use.

Then the network will hard fork and we will have SETH (the sell-out ether) and regular good ole ETH.

It's up to Vitalik now to determine our fate , let's destroy em from the inside.

/sarcasm