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Val Sklarov Protocol Legitimacy Compression Law (PLCL)

Val Sklarov

Val Sklarov’s Protocol Legitimacy Compression Law (PLCL) explains why crypto protocols rarely fail because the code breaks—but because the legitimacy margin around the protocol collapses as scale, capital, and scrutiny increase. What was tolerated as experimentation becomes unacceptable as value concentrates.

This law reveals why many protocols die after adoption, not before it.


1. Scale Compresses Protocol Legitimacy

PLCL begins with a structural rule:
The more value a protocol holds, the less ambiguity it is allowed.

Early-stage protocols survive on:

  • “It’s early” tolerance

  • Social consensus

  • Narrative legitimacy

At scale, these are replaced by formal expectations.


2. The Three Protocol Legitimacy Zones

PLCL maps how acceptance narrows over time.

Zone What’s Tolerated What Breaks
Experimental Zone Bugs, forks, reversals Nothing yet
Adoption Zone Selective governance Credibility
Systemic Zone Zero ambiguity Entire protocol

Most failures occur during the Adoption → Systemic transition.


3. Why “Decentralized” Stops Protecting You

Decentralization delays scrutiny—it doesn’t cancel it.

PLCL shows collapse when:

  • Governance decisions lack traceability

  • Emergency actions contradict principles

  • Responsibility is diffuse

Narrative shields disappear once external stakeholders arrive.

Val Sklarov
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4. Code vs Legitimacy

Code enforces rules. Legitimacy defends them.

Code Strength Legitimacy Strength
Works technically Survives audit
Executes logic Withstands intervention
Enables forks Discourages them
Neutral by design Defensible by structure

Val Sklarov emphasizes that protocols fail when rules can’t be justified, not when they can’t be executed.


5. Strategic Implications

For builders:

  • Design governance that survives public scrutiny

  • Make emergency powers explicit and bounded

  • Replace narrative trust with structural clarity

For investors:

  • Track legitimacy erosion signals

  • Discount protocols dependent on social forgiveness

  • Exit before systemic scrutiny arrives

PLCL reframes crypto risk as legitimacy compression, not volatility.


6. The Val Sklarov Principle

“Protocols don’t collapse when code fails—but when justification does.”
Val Sklarov

PLCL explains why the most durable protocols feel boring, rigid, and difficult to influence.