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zk-rollups-the-endgame-for-scaling
Blog

The Future of Censorship Resistance in Ordered Rollups

Ethereum's L1 credibly neutral ordering is being traded for L2 scalability. We dissect how centralized sequencers and encrypted mempools in rollups like Starknet and zkSync Era create new, profitable vectors for censorship.

introduction
THE CORE DILEMMA

Introduction: The Great Trade-Off

Ordered rollups sacrifice censorship resistance for performance, creating a systemic vulnerability.

Centralized sequencing is the norm for Arbitrum, Optimism, and Base because it provides low-latency, atomic composability. This creates a single point of failure where a sequencer can censor or reorder transactions.

Censorship resistance is a public good that Ethereum's base layer provides but rollups outsource. The trade-off is explicit: you get cheap, fast transactions but inherit the sequencer's moral and legal framework.

The vulnerability is contractual, not cryptographic. Users have no cryptographic guarantee their transaction will be included. Their only recourse is a slow, expensive L1 force-inclusion mechanism, which defeats the purpose of using an L2.

Evidence: During the OFAC sanctions against Tornado Cash, centralized sequencers complied, demonstrating the protocol-level censorship risk. This is a design flaw, not an implementation bug.

thesis-statement
THE CENSORSHIP FRONTIER

Core Thesis: Ordering is Sovereignty

The final, non-negotiable layer of censorship resistance for rollups depends on who controls transaction ordering.

Sequencer centralization creates a kill switch. A single entity controlling the transaction ordering for a rollup can front-run, censor, or reorder transactions at will, replicating the exact permissioned control that blockchains were built to eliminate.

Sovereign rollups are the logical endpoint. By posting data to a base layer like Celestia or Ethereum but retaining the right to fork the chain, sovereign rollups like Dymension RollApps make sequencer censorship a temporary nuisance, not a permanent failure.

Shared sequencers are a half-step. Networks like Espresso Systems or Astria decentralize ordering across many rollups, but the fork choice rule remains tied to the L1, creating a political, not technical, censorship guarantee.

Evidence: The Ethereum PBS (Proposer-Builder Separation) model proves that separating block building from proposing is possible, but rollups must adopt a forkable data availability layer to achieve the same sovereign guarantees.

ORDERING LAYER ANALYSIS

Censorship Risk Profile: Major ZK-Rollups

Compares the censorship resistance and liveness guarantees of leading ZK-Rollups based on their sequencer and proposer architectures.

Feature / MetriczkSync EraStarknetPolygon zkEVMLinea

Centralized Sequencer

Permissioned Proposer Set

Sequencer Liveness SLA

99.9%

99.9%

99.9%

99.9%

Forced Inclusion Time

~24 hours

~12 hours

~24 hours

~24 hours

Decentralized Sequencer Roadmap

Q4 2024

Q4 2024

Q3 2024

2025

Proposer Bond Required

N/A

500K STRK

N/A

N/A

MEV Auction (MEVA) Support

Base Layer Finality to L1

~1 hour

~3-5 hours

~30-45 min

~4 hours

deep-dive
THE INCENTIVE SHIFT

From MEV Extraction to Censorship-For-Profit

The economic model of rollup sequencing is evolving from passive MEV capture to active censorship as a service.

Sequencers become censors. A rollup's centralized sequencer holds absolute ordering power, enabling them to filter transactions for profit. This is a direct transition from MEV extraction, where value is captured from order, to censorship-for-profit, where value is captured from exclusion.

The OFAC compliance trap. Protocols like Tornado Cash create a regulatory attack surface. A sequencer complying with sanctions must censor transactions, creating a two-tiered access system that violates blockchain's core neutrality principle. This is not hypothetical; it's the operational reality for any sequencer under US jurisdiction.

Forced decentralization is the only defense. The long-term solution is permissionless proposer-builder separation (PBS). Systems like Espresso, Astria, and Shared Sequencer networks decouple block building from proposing, preventing any single entity from controlling the transaction funnel. This architecture mirrors Ethereum's post-merge roadmap.

Evidence: The 2022 OFAC sanctions demonstrated that centralized infrastructure like Infura and RPC providers will censor. Rollup sequencers with similar central points of failure face identical pressure, making their current neutrality a temporary, not permanent, state.

protocol-spotlight
THE FUTURE OF CENSORSHIP RESISTANCE IN ORDERED ROLLUPS

Architectural Responses & Mitigations

Centralized sequencers create a single point of failure for transaction ordering, threatening the core value proposition of blockchains. These are the emerging counter-strategies.

01

The Problem: Centralized Sequencer as a Censor

A single entity controls transaction ordering, enabling MEV extraction, front-running, and transaction blacklisting. This violates the credible neutrality of the base layer (e.g., Ethereum).\n- Single Point of Failure: Network halts if the sequencer goes down.\n- Regulatory Attack Vector: A legal order can force censorship of specific addresses.

100%
Control
~0s
Censorship Latency
02

The Solution: Decentralized Sequencer Sets (e.g., Espresso, Astria)

Replace the single sequencer with a permissionless set of nodes using consensus (e.g., HotStuff, Tendermint) to order transactions. This distributes trust and makes censorship collusion exponentially harder.\n- Byzantine Fault Tolerance: Requires >1/3 of nodes to be malicious for liveness failure.\n- Interoperability Play: Shared sequencers like Espresso can serve multiple rollups, creating a unified liquidity layer.

1-4s
Finality Time
>33%
Malicious Threshold
03

The Solution: Based Sequencing & L1 Finality

Pioneered by Optimism's Superchain, this model delegates sequencing rights directly to the underlying L1 (Ethereum). Transactions are ordered via L1 block builders, inheriting Ethereum's censorship resistance and decentralization.\n- L1 Alignment: Eliminates separate sequencer governance and token.\n- Force Inclusion: Users can submit transactions directly to an L1 contract if censored, with a ~24h delay.

Ethereum
Security Source
~24h
Force Inclusion Delay
04

The Solution: Proposer-Builder Separation (PBS) for Rollups

Adapt Ethereum's PBS design to the rollup layer. Separate the role of block builder (who orders tx) from proposer (who commits to L1). Builders compete in a marketplace, making sustained censorship economically irrational.\n- MEV Auction: Censorship becomes an opportunity cost.\n- Permissionless Building: Any entity can become a builder, increasing decentralization.

Market
Censorship Cost
Permissionless
Builder Set
05

The Hedge: Intent-Based & SUAVE-Like Architectures

Shift paradigm from transaction broadcasting to intent expression. Users specify a desired outcome (e.g., "swap X for Y at best rate"), and a decentralized solver network competes to fulfill it. This abstracts away the sequencer as the sole orderer.\n- Solver Competition: Breaks sequencer's monopoly on order flow.\n- Native Integration: Protocols like UniswapX and CowSwap are early adopters; SUAVE aims to be a universal intent chain.

Solver Network
Order Flow
Best Execution
User Guarantee
06

The Fallback: Direct L1 Submission & Escape Hatches

A mandatory, protocol-enforced mechanism allowing users to bypass the sequencer entirely. Transactions are sent to a verifier contract on L1, which forces their inclusion in the next rollup batch after a challenge period.\n- Non-Optional: A core part of the protocol, not a social consensus.\n- Critical Safeguard: The ultimate guarantee against total network capture, as seen in designs from Arbitrum and Optimism.

L1 Contract
Escape Hatch
7 Days
Typical Delay
counter-argument
THE ARCHITECTURAL TRADE-OFF

Steelman: Censorship is a Feature, Not a Bug

Ordered rollups can leverage controlled sequencing to create superior user experiences and unlock new design space, re-framing censorship resistance as a variable parameter.

Sequencer control enables UX breakthroughs that permissionless systems cannot match. A centralized sequencer can guarantee instant pre-confirmations, atomic cross-rollup composability, and enforceable MEV protection, as seen in early Arbitrum Stylus testnet behavior.

The trade-off is liveness for performance. Users accept a trusted liveness assumption for faster, cheaper, and more predictable execution. This mirrors the pragmatic choice users make with Coinbase or Binance over fully decentralized exchanges.

Censorship resistance becomes a slidable variable. Protocols like Espresso Systems and Astria are building shared sequencer networks that reintroduce credibly neutral ordering as an opt-in service layer, decoupling it from execution.

Evidence: The market vote is clear. Over 95% of rollup TVL resides on chains with explicit, upgradeable sequencer control, demonstrating that performance guarantees currently outweigh maximalist decentralization for most users and developers.

takeaways
THE CENSORSHIP-RESISTANT STACK

TL;DR for Builders and Investors

Ordered rollups (e.g., OP Stack, Arbitrum Orbit) trade decentralization for performance. This is the emerging toolkit to reclaim it.

01

The Problem: Centralized Sequencer = Single Point of Censorship

A single operator can reorder, delay, or censor transactions, undermining the core value proposition of Ethereum. This is the primary vulnerability in Arbitrum One, Optimism, and most L2s today.

  • Risk: Protocol-level blacklisting becomes trivial.
  • Reality: ~100% of transactions flow through a centralized sequencer.
~100%
Centralized Tx Flow
1
Failure Point
02

The Solution: Permissionless Proposer-Builder Separation (PBS)

Decouple transaction ordering (proposer) from block building (builder), creating a competitive market. Inspired by Ethereum's PBS, this is the endgame for chains like Espresso Systems and Astria.

  • Mechanism: Proposers win the right to order blocks via auction; builders compete on inclusion.
  • Outcome: Censorship requires collusion across a dynamic, permissionless set.
N > 1
Competing Builders
Auction-Based
Ordering Rights
03

The Enforcer: Force Inclusion via L1

A last-resort mechanism that allows users to bypass a censoring sequencer by submitting transactions directly to the L1 rollup contract. This is a foundational feature of Arbitrum and Optimism.

  • Trade-off: High latency (~24h delay) and cost, but guarantees eventual inclusion.
  • Utility: Acts as a credible threat, making censorship economically non-viable.
~24h
Delay
L1 Gas Cost
Execution Price
04

The Market: Intent-Based & SUAVE-Like Systems

Shift from transaction-based to intent-based flows, where users specify what they want, not how. Solvers (like in UniswapX or CowSwap) compete to fulfill it, abstracting away the sequencer. SUAVE aims to be a decentralized block builder for this entire ecosystem.

  • Benefit: Censorship resistance emerges from solver competition.
  • Future: A specialized mempool and execution network for cross-domain intents.
Solver Competition
Execution Layer
Cross-Domain
SUAVE Vision
05

The Fallback: Decentralized Sequencer Sets

A practical near-term step: replace a single operator with a permissioned set (e.g., Polygon PoS, Celo), then gradually decentralize. Espresso and Astria provide shared sequencing layers for this.

  • Threshold: Censorship requires collusion of a majority (e.g., 2/3) of nodes.
  • Path: Serves as a stepping stone to full permissionless PBS.
2/3+
Collusion Needed
Shared Layer
Architecture
06

The Investor Lens: Valuation Lies in the Stack

The value accrual shifts from the rollup's token to the critical middleware enabling its censorship resistance. Invest in the sequencer layer (Astria, Espresso), force inclusion mechanisms, and intent infrastructure (SUAVE, UniswapX).

  • Thesis: The base layer commoditizes; the anti-censorship stack captures premium.
  • Metric: Watch for % of rollups adopting a shared, decentralized sequencer.
Middleware
Value Accrual
Adoption %
Key Metric
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Ordered Rollups: The New Censorship Frontier | ChainScore Blog