Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin called for the platform to look beyond its financial roots to a broader mission of building open systems that protect privacy, freedom, and collaboration in an increasingly volatile digital environment.
In a post published in
Ethereum’s co-founders acknowledged that the network has played a limited role in directly addressing these challenges, even as internal discussions have shifted toward how the platform can contribute to broader social and technological resilience.
Buterin said that while financial autonomy remains a core value, a narrow focus on financial applications will not address the serious concerns currently facing users around the world.
He pointed to existing tools that already serve as what he calls liberating infrastructure: satellite-based internet services such as Starlink, locally operated open source AI models, encrypted messaging service Signal, and crowdsourced verification systems such as Community Notes.
He argued that Ethereum should help establish a shared digital environment where individuals and organizations can coordinate, hold assets, and manage collective systems without relying on a centralized authority.
Such spaces could include payment networks, decision-making frameworks, and collaborative platforms designed to outlast any single participant or institution.
Buterin stressed that the network should not aim to completely reinvent the global system, and that such an ambition would require a centralized focus, the opposite of a decentralized design. Instead, Ethereum must work in parallel with other open technologies to provide stability and self-determination to a fragmented world.
Developers should aim for a comprehensive infrastructure stack, extending upwards to wallets and user-facing applications and downwards to operating systems, hardware, and security layers, he wrote.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Estefano Gómez. Please see our Editorial Policy for more information on how we create and review content.

