
The post The Centralization Paradox: Why We Hate Arbitrum but Love Durov’s TON appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
So, it turns out “decentralization” is just a word we use to feel superior until someone offers us a 75% pump and 6x lower fees. Last month, when the Arbitrum Security Council pulled an emergency “freeze” on $71M in exploited ETH, the community acted like the sky was falling.
Criticism was high and on socials we saw people screaming, for instance it was a “governance crisis,” a “betrayal of trustless code,” and a red flag for the entire L2 ecosystem. But fast forward to this week, and Pavel Durov announces Telegram is basically annexing the TON blockchain and replacing the Foundation and becoming the primary validator and the market throws a parade.
One Man’s Monopoly is Another’s Bull Case
The numbers don’t lie, even if our principles do. Since the announcement, TON has rocketed from a May 3 low of $1.30 to a current CMP of $2.50. That is a 75% vertical move fueled by the kind of centralization that would usually have crypto purists reaching for their pitchforks.

While Arbitrum was punished for “emergency centralization” to save user funds, Telegram is being rewarded for “strategic centralization” to seize protocol control. Apparently, we only care about the “code is law” mantra when the price is moving sideways.
The Santiment Signal: Hype Over Hierarchy
If you want to see where the real sentiment lies, look at the social metrics. Mentions of TON hit 91 in a single four-hour window on May 5 that’s roughly six times the usual baseline. This sustained chatter shows the market isn’t just accepting Telegram’s takeover; it’s salivating over it.

Durov’s “Make TON Great Again” (MTONGA) roadmap, which includes slashing fees sixfold to a negligible $0.0005, has effectively bought the community’s silence. It’s the ultimate proof that in 2026, utility and “technical superiority” are the new gods, and decentralization is just a relic of a more idealistic era.
Looking for Consistency in a Messy Field
At the end of the day, odds tells that finding ideological consistency in crypto is like finding a needle in a messy grass field. The market’s reaction to TON vs. Arbitrum proves that context matters infinitely more than ideology. We fear a Security Council that can freeze our funds, but we cheer for a CEO who can make our transactions nearly free. As long as the fees stay low and the green candles stay tall, it seems the “The Open Network” is perfectly happy being “The Telegram Network.”

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