Vitalik Buterin Warns Ethereum Upgrade Could Shift Centralization Risk

LiveBTCNews
ETH-0,53%
BTT-0,06%

Vitalik Buterin outlines Ethereum’s block building future, warning that upgrades like ePBS shift centralization risks rather than eliminate them.

Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has raised fresh concerns about the network’s block building pipeline.

In a detailed post on X, Buterin outlined several proposed upgrades coming to Ethereum. He stressed that while these changes improve decentralization in some areas, they shift the risk elsewhere.

The upgrades span from in-protocol changes to network-layer anonymization tools.

ePBS and FOCIL: Ethereum’s First Line of Defense

Buterin explained that Glamsterdam, Ethereum’s upcoming upgrade, will introduce enshrined Proposer-Builder Separation (ePBS).

This mechanism lets block proposers outsource work to a free and open market of block builders. The goal is to prevent block builder centralization from bleeding into staking centralization.

However, Buterin was clear that ePBS does not solve block builder centralization on its own. It simply separates the two concerns. That distinction matters a great deal for how Ethereum’s security model evolves over time.

To address this gap, Buterin pointed to FOCIL, which stands for Fork-Choice Enforced Inclusion Lists.

FOCIL picks 16 random attesters and gives each of them the power to select a few transactions. Those transactions must appear in the block or the block gets rejected. Even if one hostile actor controls all block building, FOCIL ensures that censored transactions still get through.

Buterin also floated the idea of “Big FOCIL,” a more ambitious version. In this design, the FOCIL set is large enough to include all block transactions. Each participant covers a slice of sender addresses to avoid overlap.

The result is a system where block builders may only need to handle MEV-heavy transactions like decentralized exchange arbitrage.

_Related Reading: _****Vitalik Buterin Reveals Ethereum’s Plan to Fight Censorship

Encrypted Mempools and the Transaction Ingress Layer

Buterin also addressed what he called “toxic MEV,” a term for exploitative behaviors like sandwiching and front-running. These tactics harm regular users by wrapping their transactions in hostile ones.

Finally, the block building pipeline.

In Glamsterdam, Ethereum is getting ePBS, which lets proposers outsource to a free permissionless market of block builders.

This ensures that block builder centralization does not creep into staking centralization, but it leaves the…

— vitalik.eth (@VitalikButerin) March 2, 2026

Encrypted mempools are one proposed fix. If a transaction stays encrypted until it is included in a block, no one can exploit it beforehand.

The technical challenge, Buterin noted, is ensuring that transactions can be validated and decrypted at the right time. The method used to decrypt them must be reliable, efficient, and not allow early exposure. This remains an open problem with active research ongoing.

Buterin also highlighted a layer that rarely gets attention in MEV discussions: the transaction ingress layer. This is the path a transaction travels from a user’s wallet to a block.

A hostile actor watching this path can still front-run or grief users, even without touching the blockchain itself.

To fix this, Buterin pointed to several emerging solutions. These include using Tor for routing, building a custom Ethereum-focused mixnet, and low-latency designs like Flashnet.

He noted that the kohaku initiative is expected to explore pluggable support for such tools. Both the network layer and on-chain privacy protocols are part of this growing design space.

Long-Term Vision: Distributed Block Building Like BitTorrent

Buterin shared a longer-term vision for Ethereum’s block building architecture.

He compared it to BitTorrent, a system that processes data without any single server holding everything. The dream is for Ethereum to handle far more transactions than any single machine needs to see at once.

The challenge, Buterin acknowledged, is that Ethereum’s core value is synchronous shared state. Any transaction can depend on any other. That dependency forces block building to remain centralized to some degree.

His proposed workaround involves creating new categories of transactions with limited global scope. He noted that over 95% of Ethereum activity does not truly need full global state access.

By creating cheaper transaction types for that majority, and leaving existing types in place but more expensive, the network could enable more distributed building over time.

Buterin framed this as an open and exciting long-term design space.

No firm timeline or specification exists yet. But the direction points toward a more modular, distributed Ethereum that reduces reliance on any single actor in the block production chain.

Disclaimer: The information on this page may come from third parties and does not represent the views or opinions of Gate. The content displayed on this page is for reference only and does not constitute any financial, investment, or legal advice. Gate does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information and shall not be liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Virtual asset investments carry high risks and are subject to significant price volatility. You may lose all of your invested principal. Please fully understand the relevant risks and make prudent decisions based on your own financial situation and risk tolerance. For details, please refer to Disclaimer.

Related Articles

Citibank promotes "Bitcoin Banking": Striving to launch "Institutional-Grade Custody" and "Cross-Asset Collateral" services this year

Citigroup is pushing for the banking of Bitcoin, planning to deeply integrate it into the traditional financial system, with institutional-grade crypto custody services expected to launch in 2026. By simplifying Bitcoin transaction processes and reducing operational friction, Citigroup aims to attract more institutions to adopt digital assets further. Additionally, the bank is exploring the applications of stablecoins and blockchain deposit tokens, hoping to provide traditional financial institutions with more convenient ways to utilize capital.

区块客55m ago

Interest in altcoins cools down: Can Ethereum trigger a new altcoin season?

The market is forcing investors to bring risk management back to the center. From a technical perspective, the inflow of funds over the past week has driven

TapChiBitcoin57m ago

The whale "pension-usdt.eth" has reduced its BTC short position to 705 coins, with a current unrealized profit of $100,000.

Gate News Report, March 7 — According to HyperInsight monitoring, the whale address "pension-usdt.eth" has been continuously reducing its BTC short positions over the past 30 minutes. Currently, this address is short 705 BTC with 3x leverage, with an average entry price of $68,182.7, and a current unrealized profit of $100,000.

GateNews1h ago

Crypto Social Trends: Bitcoin and Ethereum Drive Conversation Across Layer-1 Ecosystem

According to a new crypto social activity report by Phoenix Group, the performance of large Layer-1 blockchain networks in online conversations and engagement is rising. The ranking, released on March 6, 2026, prioritizes the most active blockchain ecosystems in terms of social interactions and

BlockChainReporter3h ago
Comment
0/400
No comments