Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin said that 2026 should be a turning point in restoring users’ digital sovereignty — not only in the blockchain space, but alsoEthereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin said that 2026 should be a turning point in restoring users’ digital sovereignty — not only in the blockchain space, but also

Vitalik Buterin: 2026 Will Be the Year of Restoring Digital Sovereignty

  • Ethereum co-founder urged reducing reliance on centralized services and developing users’ digital sovereignty.
  • Buterin is convinced that 2026 should be a pivotal year for regaining control over data and computing.
  • Among the tools he uses are Fileverse, Signal, SimpleX, Session, OpenStreetMap, and more.

Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin said that 2026 should be a turning point in restoring users’ digital sovereignty — not only in the blockchain space, but also in the broader context of computing, communications, and data work. 

According to him, “2026 is the year we take back lost ground in computing self-sovereignty,” and this task goes far beyond the crypto industry.

Buterin said that back in 2025 he significantly revised the software stack he uses every day. In particular, he “almost completely switched to Fileverse” — an open-source solution for encrypted, decentralized documents — and also made Signal his primary messenger, moving away from Telegram. 

In addition, he installed SimpleX and Session as alternative tools for private communication.

In 2026, these changes continued, according to Buterin. He replaced Google Maps with OpenStreetMap and Organic Maps, calling the latter “the best mobile app” that is not only open, but also “privacy-preserving,” since it runs locally and reduces the number of services that know a user’s physical location. 

He also switched from Gmail to ProtonMail, noting that “though ultimately, the best thing is to use proper encrypted messengers outright.”

Buterin also paid significant attention to local large language models (LLMs). He noted that he is actively exploring the possibilities of running artificial intelligence (AI) locally, but acknowledged that the “last mile” of integration remains problematic. 

In his view, there are many powerful local models, including CPU-based and phone-compatible ones, but they lack convenient integration and a unified user interface. 

He noted that there is still no “good Google Translate equivalent” that works with local LLMs, as well as no solutions with a convenient user experience (UX) for transcription, audio input, or searching through personal documents. 

Separately, he emphasized that he does not want to keep Ollama running all the time due to high energy consumption.

At the same time, Buterin acknowledged significant progress in this area, noting that just a year ago “most of the local models did not yet exist.” Ideally, he believes, the ecosystem should move as far as possible toward local LLMs, using specialized improved models to compensate for the small number of parameters. 

For more resource-intensive scenarios, he suggested combining several approaches: paying for queries via ZK proofs, using trusted execution environments (TEE), locally filtering requests, and removing sensitive data before sending queries to large models. 

In the long term, he sees an extremely efficient fully homomorphic encryption (FHE) as the ideal solution.

In conclusion, Buterin stressed that “sending all your data to third party centralized services is unnecessary,” since the industry already has tools for a much more private approach. In his view, these tools should not only be developed, but also used much more actively.

As a reminder, Buterin emphasized the importance of prioritizing decentralized social networks and recalled his previous statements on the matter. Earlier, he said he intends to fully switch to decentralized social networks in 2026, criticizing crypto-social projects for a speculative tokenization model and calling for competition to be developed through a shared decentralized data layer and new communication formats.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Trump and Newsom seen engaging in 'friendly banter' backstage: 'Gavin, we're good'

Trump and Newsom seen engaging in 'friendly banter' backstage: 'Gavin, we're good'

President Donald Trump and California Gov. Gavin Newsom engaged in a public war of words this week in Davos, Switzerland, but a Washington, D.C., insider revealed
Share
Rawstory2026/01/23 19:55
Visa Direct Enhances Mercuryo’s Real-Time Crypto-to-Fiat Conversions

Visa Direct Enhances Mercuryo’s Real-Time Crypto-to-Fiat Conversions

TLDR Mercuryo has partnered with Visa to offer near real-time crypto-to-fiat conversions through Visa Direct. The integration enables users to off-ramp cryptocurrency
Share
Coincentral2026/01/23 20:10
Vitalik Buterin lays out new Ethereum roadmap at EDCON

Vitalik Buterin lays out new Ethereum roadmap at EDCON

The post Vitalik Buterin lays out new Ethereum roadmap at EDCON appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. At EDCON 2025 in Osaka, Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin delivered fresh details of Ethereum’s technical roadmap, delineating both short-term scaling goals and longer-term protocol transformations. The immediate priority, according to slides from the presentation, is scaling at the L1 level by raising the gas limit while maintaining decentralization. Tools such as block-level access lists, ZK-EVMs, gas repricing, and slot optimization were highlighted as means to improve throughput and efficiency. A central theme of the presentation was privacy, divided into protections for on-chain “writes” (transactions, voting, DeFi operations) and “reads” (retrieving blockchain state). Write privacy could be achieved through client-side zero-knowledge proofs, encrypted voting, and mixnet-based transaction relays. Read privacy efforts include trusted execution environments, private information retrieval techniques, dummy queries to obscure access patterns, and partial state nodes that reveal only necessary data. These measures aim to reduce information leakage across both ends of user interaction. In the medium term, Ethereum’s focus shifts to cross-Layer-2 interoperability. Vitalik described trustless L2 asset transfers, proof aggregation, and faster settlement mechanisms as key milestones toward a seamless rollup ecosystem. Faster slots and stronger finality, supported by techniques like erasure coding and three-stage finalization (3SF), are also in scope to enhance responsiveness and security. The roadmap also includes Stage 2 rollup advancements to strengthen verification efficiency, alongside a call for broader community participation to help build and maintain these improvements. The long-term “Lean Ethereum” blueprint emphasizes security, simplicity and optimization, with ambitions for quantum-resistant cryptography, formal verification of the protocol, and adoption of ideal primitives for hashing, signatures, and zero-knowledge proofs. Buterin stressed that these improvements are not just for scalability but to make Ethereum a stable, trustworthy foundation for the broader decentralized ecosystem. This is a developing story. This article was generated with the assistance of AI and reviewed by editor Jeffrey Albus before publication.…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 03:22