Bitcoin expert Jimmy Song recently outlined a problem that runs deeper than Bitcoin, one that affects almost every decentralized ecosystem today.
Even in open systems, code often remains centralized. A small group of developers ends up steering direction, while millions of users have little to no real input.
As Song puts it: When developers value different things than users, something has to give. Either you get new developers aligned with users, or users leave.
This is less a technical issue and more a coordination one.
How do you align large, global communities when human consensus doesn’t scale?
Many projects have tried to solve this through voting based governance, but that approach has serious flaws:
-
Code proposals are too complex for most users to evaluate.
-
Voting doesn’t scale, who decides what gets voted on?
3.Hierarchies and political dynamics inevitably form.
- Expression gets reduced to binary “yes/no” inputs that miss nuance.
In short, even decentralized systems can fall into centralized coordination traps.
Recently, some new approaches have started emerging. One of them from Tau Net, led by Ohad Asor takes a very different route. Instead of relying on voting, it uses a logical AI system that interprets what users mean (in computable language), maps out areas of agreement and conflict and then derives consensus automatically.
Whether or not this specific model succeeds, it raises an important question.
Can we build governance mechanisms that reflect what communities actually think and want without depending on hierarchy, politics, or mass voting?
It feels like this might be the next frontier for crypto, solving the human side of decentralization.
Is something like this the natural evolution of decentralized governance, or is true user-controlled consensus still a pipe dream?

