SoK: A Stratified Approach to Blockchain Decentralization
Christina Ovezik, Dimitris Karakostas, Aggelos Kiayias

TL;DR
This paper introduces a layered framework to systematically analyze and measure decentralization in blockchain systems, providing a practical test and applying it to Bitcoin to identify centralization issues.
Contribution
It proposes a stratified methodology for evaluating decentralization across multiple layers of blockchain systems, aiding future research and assessment.
Findings
Applied the methodology to Bitcoin, revealing decentralization strengths and weaknesses.
Introduced the Minimum Decentralization Test for quick decentralization assessment.
Identified layers where centralization risks compromise system properties.
Abstract
Decentralization has been touted as the principal security advantage which propelled blockchain systems at the forefront of developments in the financial technology space. Its exact semantics nevertheless remain highly contested and ambiguous, with proponents and critics disagreeing widely on the level of decentralization offered by existing systems. To address this, we put forth a systematization of the current landscape with respect to decentralization and we derive a methodology that can help direct future research towards defining and measuring decentralization. Our approach dissects blockchain systems into multiple layers, or strata, each possibly encapsulating multiple categories, and it enables a unified method for measuring decentralization in each one. Our layers are (1) hardware, (2) software, (3) network, (4) consensus, (5) economics ("tokenomics"), (6) client API, (7)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlockchain Technology Applications and Security
