A Brief Look at Modular Blockchains

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The next evolution of the blockchain allows for designing principle separation of concerns to scale throughput. This can be done while ensuring the network is trustless and decentralized. Modular blockchains can break the connection between computation and verification costs.

Earlier this month, Volt Capital conducted an in-depth analysis of modular blockchains. Their deep dive is beyond the scope of this article so we will cover the basics.

Evolution of Blockchains

The researchers noted that the core components of a Layer 1 blockchain can be broken up. Furthermore, the result is a vast improvement in individual layers. A more scalable, composable, and decentralized system is the final goal.

Blockchains have the scalability trilemma. This means that a compromise on decentralization, security, or scalability can provide strong properties for the other two. It is very hard to achieve all three without compromising one of them.

Fault proofs can be used to solve decentralized block validation. Splitting blockchain nodes into full nodes and light clients is one option. These light clients can then rely on fault proofs generated by full nodes for transaction validation.

Additionally, the light clients need to assume transactions are valid without having to download the entire block. This is achieved with Optimistic rollups. It can also be achieved through a mathematical primitive called erasure coding.

Erasure coding can perform data availability sampling, allowing light clients to verify the data without downloading the block.

Validity proofs and zero-knowledge can also achieve decentralized block validation. This is carried out by stripping away some of the transaction data for state transitions.

However, there has been some pushback due to security concerns. Additional trust concerns are also raised with a fragmented settlement and data availability layer, the researchers noted.

Application Chains

Blockchains are evolving in a similar way to web infrastructure. Data has moved from centralized server storage to distributed cloud storage. “The decentralized web is evolving from monolithic blockchains and siloed consensus layers to modular, application-specific chains with shared consensus layers,” the researchers stated.

Avalanche and Polygon are two networks already using application-specific chains or app-chains. They are called subnets and supernets and were reviewed by Altcoin Buzz earlier this week.

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