Helius CEO Mert shared insights on decentralization via the X platform, emphasizing that decentralization fundamentally means coordination without a central authority. According to ChainCatcher, Mert explained that if coordination costs are nearly zero, the system is effectively centralized; conversely, if costs are infinitely high, the system cannot function properly and thus cannot be considered decentralized.
Mert illustrated this concept with a thought experiment involving a highly decentralized blockchain with hundreds of thousands of home-operated nodes, distributed mining power, and token supply. He posed a hypothetical scenario where North Korea could transfer funds from Wallet A to Wallet B within a specific timeframe, equating this capability to the chain's potential to simultaneously trigger nuclear weapons globally.
He further speculated on whether a blockchain could be considered decentralized if it successfully forked to freeze Wallet A's funds without causing mass casualties. Mert concluded that while humans might coordinate due to the shared incentive of avoiding death, this does not imply the chain is unorganized. Decentralization remains defined by coordination without central authority.