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Main Authors: Notland, Jakob Svennevik, Nowostawski, Mariusz, Li, Jingyue
Format: Preprint
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2305.04079
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author Notland, Jakob Svennevik
Nowostawski, Mariusz
Li, Jingyue
author_facet Notland, Jakob Svennevik
Nowostawski, Mariusz
Li, Jingyue
contents Blockchain systems run consensus rules as code to agree on the state of the distributed ledger and secure the network. Changing these rules can be risky and challenging. In addition, it can often be controversial and take much effort to make all the necessary participants agree to adopt a change. Arguably, Bitcoin has seen centralisation tendencies in pools and in development. However, how these tendencies influence blockchain governance has received minimal community and academic attention. Our study analyses the governmental structures in a blockchain by looking into the history of Bitcoin. We investigate the process of changing consensus rules through a grounded theory analysis comprising quantitative and qualitative data from 34 consensus forks in Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash. The results reveal the decentralised behaviour in Bitcoin and blockchain. Our results are in contrast to related work, emphasising centralisation among miners and developers. Furthermore, our results show how the consensus-driven deployment techniques and governance of consensus rules are intertwined.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2305_04079
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle An Empirical Study on Governance in Bitcoin's Consensus Evolution
Notland, Jakob Svennevik
Nowostawski, Mariusz
Li, Jingyue
Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing
Blockchain systems run consensus rules as code to agree on the state of the distributed ledger and secure the network. Changing these rules can be risky and challenging. In addition, it can often be controversial and take much effort to make all the necessary participants agree to adopt a change. Arguably, Bitcoin has seen centralisation tendencies in pools and in development. However, how these tendencies influence blockchain governance has received minimal community and academic attention. Our study analyses the governmental structures in a blockchain by looking into the history of Bitcoin. We investigate the process of changing consensus rules through a grounded theory analysis comprising quantitative and qualitative data from 34 consensus forks in Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash. The results reveal the decentralised behaviour in Bitcoin and blockchain. Our results are in contrast to related work, emphasising centralisation among miners and developers. Furthermore, our results show how the consensus-driven deployment techniques and governance of consensus rules are intertwined.
title An Empirical Study on Governance in Bitcoin's Consensus Evolution
topic Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2305.04079