Buterin Pushes for a Slimmer, More Focused Ethereum Foundation

Vitalik Buterin backs a leaner Ethereum Foundation focused on CROPS, lower ETH sales and less central influence amid contributor exits.
Table of Contents

TL;DR:

  • Buterin said the Ethereum Foundation should become smaller, more focused and less central, choosing longevity over breadth while selling less ETH.
  • The new mandate emphasizes CROPS: censorship resistance, capture resistance, open source, privacy and security, rather than competing mainly on speed.
  • The foundation holds about 0.16% of ETH supply, while Buterin says nearly 90% of his net worth remains in ETH amid senior contributor exits and expected structural stabilization ahead.

Vitalik Buterin’s latest comments put the Ethereum Foundation in an uncomfortable but clarifying position. Rather than presenting the organization as Ethereum’s command center, he described it as one node inside a wider ecosystem, with a defined role that should become smaller, more focused and more durable. The foundation is choosing “longevity over breadth,” meaning fewer ETH sales and a narrower mandate. For Ethereum supporters, the message is restraint as strategy, but it arrives amid pressure from researcher departures and questions over whether a leaner foundation can still move fast enough.

A Smaller Foundation Faces a Larger Test

The new direction centers on what Buterin calls the CROPS dimension: censorship resistance, capture resistance, open source, privacy and security. He argued that Ethereum should not chase maximum throughput and low latency if that means becoming only slightly more decentralized than competitors. In his view, that path leads to mediocrity. Instead, the foundation should support work that would likely not happen elsewhere, including formal verification, chain-availability research and intermediary minimization. Ethereum’s differentiation is being framed as technical self-sovereignty, not raw benchmark competition instead of treating every speed trade-off as neutral or reversible.

The financial framing is just as important. Buterin said the foundation holds about 0.16% of total ETH supply, far below the 10% to 50% often held by rival blockchain foundations and lower than several individual holders. That weakens the idea that the foundation can, or should, act as Ethereum’s permanent steward. He also said nearly 90% of his own net worth remains in ETH, while about $40 million in onchain fiat is already allocated to open-source biotech, software and hardware work. The foundation is trying to reduce dependence on itself, even as markets still look to it for direction.

That creates a governance paradox. A smaller Ethereum Foundation could reinforce decentralization, attract independent teams and reduce the perception of central control. Yet the shift comes during a period of high-profile exits, including multiple senior contributors leaving in 2026, which makes the timing feel less tidy than the philosophy. Buterin expects the new long-term structure to stabilize over the coming months. Until then, Ethereum’s next credibility test is execution without central gravity, proving that a slimmer foundation can protect core values without slowing research, coordination and confidence across the ecosystem while investors, developers and users watch closely this year.

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