The achievement marks the end of a decade-long development journey that began with Buterin's first research commit in 2015.The achievement marks the end of a decade-long development journey that began with Buterin's first research commit in 2015.

Vitalik Buterin Says Ethereum Solved Blockchain’s Biggest Challenge With Live Technology

Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin announced on January 3, 2026, that the network has successfully solved the blockchain trilemma through two groundbreaking technologies now running on the mainnet.

“The trilemma has been solved – not on paper, but with live running code,” Buterin stated in his announcement. He emphasized that one half of the solution, data availability sampling, is already active on mainnet, while the other half, zero-knowledge Ethereum Virtual Machines, has reached production-quality performance.

Understanding the Blockchain Trilemma

The blockchain trilemma refers to the challenge of achieving three critical properties simultaneously: decentralization, security, and scalability. Buterin coined this term after observing that blockchain networks could typically excel at only two of these aspects while struggling with the third.

Decentralization ensures control is distributed across network participants rather than concentrated in a single entity. Security provides robust defenses against attacks and manipulation. Scalability enables high transaction throughput without compromising the other two properties.

Source: @VitalikButerin

For years, this limitation restricted blockchain adoption. Bitcoin achieved decentralization and security but processed only around seven transactions per second. Other networks that prioritized speed often sacrificed decentralization or security in the process.

PeerDAS: Live on Mainnet Today

The first technology solving the trilemma is PeerDAS, which stands for Peer Data Availability Sampling. This system went live on Ethereum mainnet on December 3, 2025, as part of the Fusaka upgrade.

PeerDAS fundamentally changes how Ethereum validates data. Instead of forcing validators to download entire blocks of data, the system allows them to verify data availability by checking only random pieces. Validators now examine just one-sixteenth of the data rather than downloading everything.

This approach uses Reed-Solomon erasure coding to divide blob data into 128 columns distributed across specific network subnets. Each validator subscribes to at least eight randomly chosen column subnets, receiving only a fraction of all data while still maintaining network security.

The result is an eight-fold theoretical increase in scaling capacity without overwhelming individual nodes. The network can now handle significantly more data while keeping participation accessible to regular validators rather than requiring expensive infrastructure.

Zero-Knowledge EVMs Reach Production Quality

The second breakthrough involves zero-knowledge Ethereum Virtual Machines, which have reached production-grade performance after years of development. ZK-EVMs enable faster transaction verification without exposing underlying data through cryptographic proofs.

The performance improvements are dramatic. Proving time dropped from 16 minutes to just 16 seconds, representing a 60-fold improvement. Costs fell by 45 times, and 99% of Ethereum blocks can now be proven in under 10 seconds on target hardware.

Development of ZK-EVMs began around 2020, following several years of theoretical research. These systems prove the correctness of program execution, including the validity of inputs and outputs, without revealing the actual data being processed.

However, Buterin noted that significant safety work remains. While performance has reached production quality, the focus now shifts to ensuring cryptographic security meets the highest standards.

Security Takes Priority in 2026

The Ethereum Foundation announced on December 18, 2025, that security will be the primary focus for zkEVM development throughout 2026. The foundation set three critical milestones requiring teams to achieve 128-bit provable security by year-end.

Recent research revealed that some mathematical assumptions underlying certain proof systems were incorrect. This discovery prompted the foundation to establish stricter standards. “If an attacker can forge a proof, they can forge anything: mint tokens from nothing, rewrite state, steal funds,” the foundation warned.

The roadmap requires all zkEVM teams to integrate with “soundcalc,” a security measurement tool, by February 2026. By May, teams must achieve 100-bit provable security with proofs under 600 kilobytes. The final December milestone demands full 128-bit security with smaller proofs and formal soundness arguments.

Implementation Timeline Through 2030

Ethereum’s roadmap for fully implementing these solutions extends through the end of the decade. In 2026, the network will introduce large gas limit increases through Bandwidth Allocation Limits and enshrined Proposer-Builder Separation. The block gas limit already increased from 45 million to 60 million units in late 2025.

The same year will bring the first opportunities for participants to run ZK-EVM nodes on parts of the network. Between 2026 and 2028, developers will implement gas repricings and state structure modifications to make higher throughput safe.

From 2027 to 2030, ZK-EVMs will become the primary method for validating blocks across Ethereum. This transition enables further substantial gas limit increases while maintaining decentralization and security.

Buterin also described distributed block building as a “long-term ideal holy grail” where no single entity ever constructs a complete block. This would reduce centralization risks and improve geographic fairness for transaction inclusion across different regions.

Network Performance and Institutional Adoption

The improvements have already produced measurable results. According to Chainspect data, Ethereum’s theoretical transactions per second peak reached 238.1, compared to just 15 TPS in the network’s early days. That represents a 16-fold increase over approximately ten years.

Layer-2 networks built on Ethereum add roughly 4,000 additional transactions per second through rollup ecosystems. These scaling solutions benefit directly from PeerDAS capabilities, which lower costs and increase data availability.

Institutional adoption continues accelerating. Ethereum currently hosts over 66% of all tokenized real-world assets. Major financial institutions including BlackRock, JPMorgan Chase, Securitize, and Ondo Finance have deployed tokenized instruments on the network. BlackRock’s Ethereum ETF expanded its holdings to approximately 3.47 million ETH by January 2026, worth over $10 billion, representing significant institutional confidence.

The network maintains 1.1 million validators and has achieved a decade of continuous uptime, demonstrating reliability at scale.

The Road Ahead

Buterin compared Ethereum’s evolution to earlier peer-to-peer networks. BitTorrent offered huge bandwidth and decentralization but lacked consensus. Bitcoin achieved decentralization and consensus but suffered from low bandwidth because work was replicated rather than distributed.

“Now, Ethereum with PeerDAS and ZK-EVMs, we get: decentralized, consensus and high bandwidth,” Buterin explained. He described the upgraded architecture as “BitTorrent with consensus,” combining the best properties of previous systems.

While the announcement marks a major milestone, Buterin acknowledged that full implementation requires continued development through 2030. The focus now shifts to ensuring safety meets the same high standards as performance, with particular attention to cryptographic security and formal verification of proof systems.

The combination of live mainnet deployment and measurable performance improvements provides concrete evidence supporting the claim that Ethereum has addressed the fundamental challenge that limited blockchain technology for over a decade.

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