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Vitalik Buterin Urges Zcash Community to Reject Token-Based Governance

Vitalik Buterin Urges Zcash Community to Reject Token-Based Governance

Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has issued a warning to the Zcash community against implementing token-based voting for governance decisions. He argued the mechanism would shift focus toward short-term price incentives while undermining the privacy-focused project's core mission.

What Happened: Privacy Concerns Drive Opposition

In a Nov. 30 post on X, Buterin referenced his 2021 essay on decentralized governance to explain his position, pointing to structural weaknesses in token-weighted systems.

He identified vulnerabilities including unbundled rights that enable covert vote buying and concentration of power among large holders. Small participants often vote without considering outcomes because they view their individual influence as minimal, he noted.

"Privacy is exactly the sort of thing that will erode over time if left to the median token holder," Buterin wrote in his post.

He described token voting as "bad in all kinds of ways" and said it would represent a step backward from Zcash's current governance structure. The comments emerged during ongoing debate over how the Zcash Community Grants committee should be selected. The five-member group reviews and approves major grants across the ecosystem, with some community members arguing the existing framework has become outdated.

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Why It Matters: Markets Versus Committees

Mert Mumtaz, CEO of Helius and a Zcash investor, framed the dispute as a fundamental governance challenge.

He argued that market-based systems contain built-in correction mechanisms through price movements and shifting influence, while committees operate without comparable feedback loops. Poor decisions trigger falling prices and updates to collective knowledge in market systems, but committees can remain disconnected from real-world consequences, according to Mumtaz.

He drew a comparison to what Nassim Nicholas Taleb termed the "interventionista" — bureaucrats making high-stakes decisions without bearing associated risks.

Ancient Roman generals commanded from the front lines where survival depended on decision quality, Mumtaz noted, contrasting that accountability with committee-based governance.

While acknowledging flaws in token voting, he called static committees a deeper problem because they are "uncriticizable and account to no one."

Community member Naval said third-party oversight introduces security vulnerabilities regardless of independence claims. Another user, Darklight, countered that market-driven systems trend toward plutocracy and may fail to preserve civil liberties.

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