Ethereum (ETH) has consistently raised great expectations. Vitalik Buterin is the one, however, pulling the discussion away from the new and easy aspects to the old and difficult ones. He points out that Ethereum was never intended to be efficient but rather to exist for a long time.
The Ethereum founder has recently put up his stance. ETH does not aim at defeating Wall Street through finance or doing so through apps to Silicon Valley. It is here to provide people with the difficult freedom. When institutions collapse. When people are denied access. When laws are changed in the wink of an eye.
This transition is of great importance. It puts to the test the perceptions that the majority of users have about blockchains at present. Speed, low cost, and user-friendly interfaces are the main factors in the conversation. However, Buterin asserts that those objectives are not the main issue.
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Buterin holds that Ethereum is a platform that can still function in case of massive breakdowns of other systems. It does not scale up to the maximum possible gains. Instead, it is built to last through the worst-case scenario.
He contends that the efficiency of fintech platforms will forever be unmatched. Payment processing by banks will always be quicker. Corporations will always create more user-friendly applications. According to him, it is a losing game to compete on such terms.
Ethereum, on the other hand, emphasizes user sovereignty. This implies the absence of a single power ruling over the system. No one to turn it off completely. No one to control who can use it by denying access. The blockchain must continue to be neutral, allow unrestricted access, and be available to everyone, regardless of their location.
Buterin connects this dream with the original Ethereum ideals. The Trustless manifesto was not preoccupied with yield farming or fast transactions. It was mainly concerned with protecting the system from total failure. Deplatforming, developer abandonment, and cyber disruption.
To illustrate his argument, Buterin refers to the aforementioned stress scenarios encountered in the real world. The going down of a prominent service like Cloudflare is one of such scenarios. An internet cyber war, the other one. However, Ethereum will continue to operate – though at a slower pace. He also regards the long delays of latencies as a tolerable condition in the case of ETH being up. He says, for example, that 2000 milliseconds should still be experienced as 2000 milliseconds.
Private chains can be constructed by anyone. Permissioned ledgers can be operated by companies. However, a completely decentralized and censorship-resistant block space is a rarity. Buterin thinks that’s the place where the value of Ethereum is hidden.
The response has been divided. Those against it claim that the bad user experience along with the high fees are the other factors increasing the risk. Unpleasant design may not only lose users’ trust but also result in their quick censorship. Very gradual developments, according to them, drive the users away.
Supporters pushback arguing that terms sovereignty and comfort are not synonymous Sovereignty is about endurance while independence is not a swift destruction but a major sense of hardness.
Ethereum is at a decisive moment in its development. One of the two routes will be taken towards better quality and higher efficiency. The second one, however, is more about fortitude and impartiality. Vitalik Buterin has openly expressed his preference. According to him, ETH will be there to take the whole network down if nothing else works.
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