The post Vitalik Buterin Wants Ethereum to Survive Without Him, Reveals 7-Step Plan appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin wants the network to survive without him. In a new statement, he introduced what he calls the “walkaway test.”
The idea is simple: Ethereum should keep running even if all its developers vanished tomorrow.
He compared the difference to owning a hammer versus relying on a service. Once you buy a hammer, it’s yours. It works whether the company exists or not. Buterin wants Ethereum to work the same way.
Buterin laid out seven upgrades the network needs to hit over the next few years:
He was direct about not delaying quantum security for short-term gains.
Also Read: Vitalik Buterin Admits Bitcoin Maxis Were “Far Ahead” on Crypto’s Biggest Threat
Buterin sees ETH as long-term trustless collateral. He pointed to use cases like ETH-backed stablecoins that don’t rely on heavy governance.
The goal is to reach a point where future upgrades happen through parameter changes, not constant protocol overhauls. Validators would vote on scaling adjustments the same way they vote on gas limits today.
The crypto community backed the vision.
One user called it “spot on,” adding that prioritizing long-term robustness over perpetual tweaks ensures it’s a true foundation for decentralized apps.
Buterin expects at least one box checked per year, ideally more. He wants the heavy lifting done now so Ethereum can run stable for decades.
He signed off with a line the community knows well: “Ethereum goes hard. This is the gwei.”


