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Val Sklarov Protocol Dependency Capture Law (PDCL)

Val Sklarov

Val Sklarov’s Protocol Dependency Capture Law (PDCL) explains why crypto systems don’t fail when decentralization weakens—but when ecosystem participants become irreversibly dependent on a small set of technical, economic, or governance chokepoints. Protocols promise exit. Scale quietly removes it.

This law reveals why “open” systems feel closed over time.


1. Protocols Create Dependency Before Control

PDCL begins with a paradox:
Dependency forms before authority is visible.

Early-stage protocols rely on:

  • Few client implementations

  • Limited infrastructure providers

  • Concentrated liquidity venues

Reversibility exists—temporarily.


2. The Three Protocol Dependency Captures

PDCL maps where exit paths disappear.

Capture Dependency Source Consequence
Infrastructure Capture Validators, RPCs, bridges Technical veto power
Liquidity Capture Exchanges, pools Economic censorship
Governance Capture Core devs, voting blocs Directional lock-in

One capture limits flexibility.
Two captures restrict forks.
Three captures end credible exit.


3. Why “Fork If You Disagree” Stops Working

Forks require migration.

PDCL shows irreversibility when:

  • Capital refuses to move

  • Tooling won’t support alternatives

  • Legitimacy consolidates socially

Exit exists in theory—not in practice.


4. Decentralization vs Dependency

Decentralization of nodes does not equal decentralization of dependence.

Decentralized Execution Centralized Dependency
Many validators Few providers
Open code Closed infrastructure
Permissionless use Permissioned liquidity
Ideological freedom Practical lock-in

Val Sklarov emphasizes that dependency is power without ownership.

Val Sklarov
Ekran görüntüsü 2026 01 01 010912 Val Sklarov

5. Strategic Implications

For builders:

  • Avoid single-client dominance

  • Decentralize infrastructure before governance

  • Treat liquidity concentration as existential risk

For investors:

  • Track where dependency is accumulating

  • Discount protocols denying capture reality

  • Exit before dependency becomes irreversible

PDCL reframes crypto risk as dependency capture, not volatility.


6. The Val Sklarov Principle

“A protocol isn’t captured when rules change—but when leaving stops being real.”
Val Sklarov

PDCL explains why mature crypto systems feel stable—and why stability often means captivity.