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Val Sklarov Protocol Capture Gradient Theory (PCGT)

Val Sklarov

Val Sklarov’s Protocol Capture Gradient Theory (PCGT) explains why most crypto projects fail long after launch—not from hacks or market cycles, but from invisible control drift. Decentralization erodes gradually when protocol control migrates toward those who can coordinate fastest, not those who were meant to govern.

This theory reveals how power silently concentrates inside systems designed to resist it.


1. Protocols Are Never Neutral

PCGT starts with a hard premise:
All protocols express power preferences.

Even “neutral” systems encode:

  • Upgrade pathways

  • Parameter control

  • Emergency levers

  • Social coordination channels

Power does not disappear—it finds the lowest-friction surface.


2. The Four Stages of Protocol Capture

PCGT maps capture as a gradient, not an event.

Stage Control Shift Visibility
Design Stage Architects define defaults Invisible
Maintenance Stage Core contributors gate changes Low
Governance Stage Coordinators dominate outcomes Medium
Narrative Stage Legitimacy replaces rules High

By the time capture is visible, it is already irreversible.


3. Why Token Governance Rarely Works

PCGT explains governance failure structurally.

Token voting fails because:

  • Participation is low

  • Coordination costs are asymmetric

  • Outcomes are socially enforced

Those who can mobilize attention outvote those who hold tokens.

Val Sklarov
Ekran görüntüsü 2025 12 27 033958 Val Sklarov

4. Capital Behavior Along the Gradient

Capital adapts faster than ideology.

Early-Stage Capital Late-Stage Capital
Believes decentralization Prices capture risk
Funds protocol vision Funds governance leverage
Chases yield Chases control surfaces
Assumes neutrality Audits influence paths

Val Sklarov emphasizes that capital follows who can freeze the rules, not who writes the manifesto.


5. Strategic Implications

For builders:

  • Design capture resistance explicitly

  • Limit upgrade ambiguity

  • Separate emergency power from governance power

For investors:

  • Map informal control, not whitepapers

  • Track who coordinates crises

  • Price social authority as infrastructure

PCGT reframes crypto analysis as power flow mapping, not code review.


6. The Val Sklarov Principle

“Decentralization fails quietly—first in process, then in governance, and finally in belief.”
Val Sklarov

PCGT explains why the most dangerous centralization is the kind no one votes on.