Ethereum founder Vitalik proposes major changes to the network

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Jinse Finance
a day ago
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Author: André Beganski Translator: Baihua Blockchain

It turns out that Vitalik Buterin is not entirely satisfied with the first major overhaul of the Ethereum consensus mechanism, despite the fact that it has been polished and discussed for many years on the technical side.

In a blog post on Monday, the Ethereum co-founder proposed several potential improvements to the Ethereum proof-of-stake model. These include lowering the capital threshold for individual stakers and shortening the time it takes for Ethereum blocks to be confirmed.

Two years ago, the "Merge" event completely changed the way Ethereum transactions are verified. Ethereum no longer relies on a computer network that consumes a lot of energy to ensure its security, but instead turns to a system where validators stake assets in the network.

Validators are rewarded for packaging transaction blocks and verifying the accuracy of other blocks. To participate in this process, validators need to stake 32 ETH (about $84,000) as a "participation guarantee". However, Buterin believes this threshold can be significantly lowered to 1 ETH (about $2,600).

"Polls have repeatedly shown that the main factor preventing more people from staking independently is the 32 ETH minimum threshold," he wrote. "Lowering this threshold to 1 ETH will solve this problem, at which point other issues will become the main limiting factors for independent staking."

The growth rate of Ethereum network validators has slowed down recently. According to beaconchai.in data, since the number of active validators exceeded 1 million in April, about 73,000 validators have joined. In the past month, this number has increased by less than 3,000.

Reducing the staking requirements for Ethereum validators can also alleviate some concerns about network centralization. Currently, the leading decentralized ETH liquid staking platform Lido Finance accounts for 28% of all staked Ethereum, according to Dune dashboard data.

The second part of Buterin's improvement proposals mainly focuses on the issue of transaction finality. This term refers to Ethereum transactions that are included in a and cannot be changed once confirmed.

Buterin wrote that as of now, Ethereum transactions take about 15 minutes to be finalized. This is because Ethereum's progress is measured in "epochs", with each epoch occurring approximately every 6.4 minutes. Each epoch consists of 32 "slots", with a new typically generated every 12 seconds.

Chris Meisl, Chief Technology Officer and co-founder of Blocknative, explained that after two epochs have passed, it is economically infeasible for an attacker to roll back an Ethereum . At this point, you can consider it "extremely secure", he wrote in a blog post last year.

Buterin also mentioned that "single-slot confirmation" would reduce the finality time to 12 seconds. Combined with the reduced staking requirement, this would make "Ethereum's properties more consistent with those of (more centralized) Layer1 chains focused on performance".

However, Buterin also acknowledged that there are multiple different ways to implement "single-slot confirmation", including using powerful methods with advanced cryptography, or a two-tier system designed for stakers.

Buterin's blog post was published at a time when the discussion around Layer2 networks is intensifying. While Ethereum's Dencun upgrade in March introduced a new way to help users reduce transaction costs, it also led to a period of inflation in Ethereum's circulating supply.

At the same time, Ethereum core developers are preparing for the next major upgrade - Pectra. The first part of this upgrade is expected to be released in early 2024 and will adjust the way Ethereum stakers receive rewards.

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Disclaimer: The content above is only the author's opinion which does not represent any position of Followin, and is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, investment advice from Followin.
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