English

Cryptocurrency Egalitarianism: A Quantitative Approach

Computers and Society 2019-07-05 v1 Cryptography and Security

Abstract

Since the invention of Bitcoin one decade ago, numerous cryptocurrencies have sprung into existence. Among these, proof-of-work is the most common mechanism for achieving consensus, whilst a number of coins have adopted "ASIC-resistance" as a desirable property, claiming to be more "egalitarian,"S where egalitarianism refers to the power of each coin to participate in the creation of new coins. While proof-of-work consensus dominates the space, several new cryptocurrencies employ alternative consensus, such as proof-of-stake in which block minting opportunities are based on monetary ownership. A core criticism of proof-of-stake revolves around it being less egalitarian by making the rich richer, as opposed to proof-of-work in which everyone can contribute equally according to their computational power. In this paper, we give the first quantitative definition of a cryptocurrency's \emph{egalitarianism}. Based on our definition, we measure the egalitarianism of popular cryptocurrencies that (may or may not) employ ASIC-resistance, among them Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, and Monero. Our simulations show, as expected, that ASIC-resistance increases a cryptocurrency's egalitarianism. We also measure the egalitarianism of a stake-based protocol, Ouroboros, and a hybrid proof-of-stake/proof-of-work cryptocurrency, Decred. We show that stake-based cryptocurrencies, under correctly selected parameters, can be perfectly egalitarian, perhaps contradicting folklore belief.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1907.02434,
  title  = {Cryptocurrency Egalitarianism: A Quantitative Approach},
  author = {Dimitris Karakostas and Aggelos Kiayias and Christos Nasikas and Dionysis Zindros},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1907.02434},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

29 pages, 4 figures, Tokenomics 2019

R2 v1 2026-06-23T10:12:22.029Z