#密码资产动态追踪 Can Ethereum transition from reliance to independence? Vitalik provides the answer



The question isn't "can it," but "when can it." Vitalik's recent thoughts are very clear—Ethereum needs to pass a test: even if all core developers disappear, it should operate naturally like gravity.

In other words, Ethereum shouldn't be a product that is maintained, but a tool that can be frozen. This means the protocol itself must evolve to a stage where all value propositions are no longer based on "future features" or "who will continue to iterate."

It sounds radical, but it's actually pragmatic. Vitalik has outlined a roadmap: quantum resistance, scalable architecture, state model optimization, proof-of-stake system stability, censorship-resistant block construction mechanisms. The community should tackle these one by one over the next few years, achieving at least one key breakthrough each year.

Interestingly, this doesn't mean stopping innovation. Instead, the direction of innovation shifts from frequent hard forks to client optimization and parameter fine-tuning—like not constantly rebuilding the structure but solidifying the foundation once and for all. In the long run, the return on investment in security and stability far exceeds that of feature stacking.

Once the foundation is solid enough, Ethereum will truly become the best home for trustless applications.

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WinterWarmthCatvip
· 7h ago
Listen to this, Vitalik is right—V God’s idea is to turn ETH from a "child that needs to be taken care of" into an "adult that can stand on its own," ruthless.
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DataOnlookervip
· 7h ago
It sounds like the same old logic of putting all your eggs in one basket... If all the developers really leave, who will fix the bugs?
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GateUser-6bc33122vip
· 7h ago
It sounds like the goal is to turn Ethereum from something that "needs to be served" into an autonomous machine... There's some real logic to that. Can it still run if the core developers all disappear? It's easy to say, but really hard to do. Feels like we've been just painting big pictures these past few years.
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SchrodingersPapervip
· 7h ago
Wait a minute... Is Vitalik trying to turn ETH into a perpetual motion machine? It sounds incredible, but it also feels like just a pie-in-the-sky idea haha
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GateUser-26d7f434vip
· 7h ago
The term "freezing protocol" sounds hardcore but is actually the most stable... But if it really reaches the point where all developers are gone and it can still run, how solid would that be?
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AirdropHarvestervip
· 8h ago
Listen to this, Vitalik is saying that Ethereum should be self-sufficient and able to operate even if all developers are gone. This logic is a bit extreme, feels like he's digging his own grave?
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