Whether they are benevolent or not is irrelevant. Charging no fees does not replace necessity to solve the hash.
Benevolency (as an overall aspect of the network) is what bitcoin, in my opinion, had in favor of it.
The fact that there would never exist a majority control, at any point, was the allure. If, at some time in the future, an acceptance of a benevolent master node would be equivalent to giving acceptance to a perceived benevolent dictator, then I would seriously start to question the legitimacy of what bitcoin puts itself out there to represent: a decentralized currency.
The future of bitcoin, therefore, is in the belief that human nature is not ultimately corrupt, or that the ones that end up wielding the most power (even from the result of their benevolence) won't end up succumbing to the bad side of human nature (greed, lust for power, etc.).
Or, is there a something I'm missing? Oh, and please forgive me if I come across as a die-hard skeptic, but I'm only entering into a Socratic dialog in the hopes that you guys can convince me of the long-term security of the network.