In his post “The risks of LSD”, Danny Ryan identifies control of the NO set (who goes in, who goes out) as the biggest risk from large liquid staking protocols like Lido. After discarding the two most popular options today, changing the set via governance (Lido, Alluvial) or economic selection (Rocketpool), he looks at a third option: a dual-governance, where stETH holders can veto proposals and backstop the safety of the protocol.
In this chapter, he argues that bringing stakers into governance would not add meaningful security because there are many more users of Ethereum than stakers, and they are not the same group. In other words, the stakers don’t represent Ethereum or its users, and hence are not sufficiently incentivized to protect them.
This is a bit of a red herring, and I will explain why.
First, the observation “users and block producers are not the same group” is completely orthogonal to whether stake is delegated or not. It’s simply a property of PoS and all other known Sybil resistance mechanisms (except maybe proof of humanity which is unworkable for other reasons).
Second, there are many ways in which block producers are incentivized to act in the best interest of users. These include
So not only is Danny wrong - if anything it can be argued that PoS creates a bigger overlap between users and block producers than PoW does, and LSD-PoS (where the stake itself can circulate as money/collateral in the economy) creates an even bigger overlap between users and block producers than pure-PoS does. So stakers, and especially LSD-stakers, are very aligned with the security of Ethereum.
TLDR: “Stakers don’t represent users” is a true observation but one that exists in PoS and all other consensus systems. LSD-PoS is not to blame and in fact makes the problem better, not worse.