
gphummer.eth
2.1K posts

gphummer.eth
@gphummer
Disintermediate the Leviathan @etherealize_io






The "Ethereum 3.0 vision" is what @RyanSAdams called it That vision is now a mission and it's called "Ethereum Economic Zones" Incredibly proud to be team Gnosis ☺️


Erik Vorhees: “ETH is still the king, and I don’t see it being dethroned" The founder of ShapeShift and Venice AI is asked if Ethereum was a “sustainable ecosystem.” He replies: “I think [Ethereum] is more than sustainable. I think it is the clear winner of the smart contract innovation. It actually wasn’t the first mover in smart contracts, but it was the first one to achieve any sort of scale with smart contracts. What’s most important about Ethereum isn’t so much the first-mover advantage as much as it is the network effect it has had since it was released.” Erik continues: “I think both Bitcoin and Ethereum have achieved a network effect that is close to unassailable. People have gotten distracted with some of these other L1s, but if you look at metrics like where the developers are and where stablecoin volumes are, these are hard to fake metrics that are very important. They’ve always been predominantly on Ethereum. It’s not even close. I’m glad that other people tried to build L1s. The process of innovation and competition is really important. But ETH is still the king, and I don’t see it being dethroned. It has had various scaling challenges — the patchwork of L2s and the UX problems between them sucks. But I have a suspicion that Base is going to end up becoming the predominant L2 on top of the predominant L1 of ETH and that vertical is going to be very powerful and very strong. So yes, I’m always bullish on ETH in the same way I’m always bullish on Bitcoin.” However, Erik warns that if Base loses its permissionlessness it “will flounder and deserves to die”: “Base has designed things very well. It has gotten a lot of adoption and very quickly became the major L2 even though it was not the first mover. I think it’s gaining a network effect pretty quickly. It obviously has a very powerful corporate ally in Coinbase, and to the degree that Coinbase does not abuse that privilege, that’s a very good privilege. Abuse here means: if Coinbase tries to exert control over base such that it loses its permissionlessness, then it will flounder and deserves to die. But Coinbase has been a very good actor in this regard, and they deserve a lot of credit for demonstrating the principles of decentralization and permissionless innovation in several parts of what they do. Obviously the centralized exchange is not that, but it’s not trying to be either.” Source: @CoinDesk (Dec 2025)

Bitcoin is facing three major problems which Ethereum has already solved. Quantum upgrade: Bitcoin has no central entity to coordinate the quantum upgrade. Moreover, Bitcoin's culture is extremely conservative, which means big changes are socially very difficult. Inaccessible coins: When the quantum upgrade happens, all BTC will need to be moved to new quantum-proof addresses. But there are about 1.7M BTC that are presumed inaccessible, and which are therefore vulnerable to quantum hacking. This creates a dilemma: either miners freeze the coins or quantum hackers will take them. This dilemma will cause huge divisions within the Bitcoin community, similar to the block size war. Economic security problem: As the block subsidy runs out, Bitcoin will become less and less secure. Transaction fees will never replace the subsidy. There are no good solutions to this problem. Fortunately, Ethereum has already solved all these problems. Ethereum Foundation will easily coordinate the quantum upgrade; relative to Bitcoin, there are very few inaccessible ETH quantum hackers will eventually be able to take; and the economic security problem is solved with PoS and effective tail emissions. Culturally speaking, as the years go by Bitcoin is becoming more centralized while Ethereum is becoming more cypherpunk and ossified. On the one hand, look at what Saylor has done to Bitcoin culture. On the other hand, read the recent Ethereum Foundation manifesto. Due to Bitcoin's three major problems and the slowly changing cultures of Bitcoin and Ethereum, I expect ETH to gain a lot of ground against BTC in the coming years. Considering relative market caps, buying ETH today is like buying BTC at $12,200.


Fair warning. This post is bullish on Ethereum. Yesterday, the Ethereum Foundation Enterprise team ran the Institutional Ethereum Forum in New York City. Broad Adoption Activated. Invitation only. 100's of Banks, asset managers, and infrastructure providers representing around $250 trillion in assets under management. feedback so far "Absolute banger tbh." "People won't stop talking and networking and the content has all been great." "Your institutional team did an amazing job. I was there. Kudos." BlackRock. Western Union. Robinhood. Moody's. Baillie Gifford. Securitize. All on panels. Not as guests. As participants building on Ethereum. This is what adoption actually looks like. EF also presents its post-quantum security strategy and launches pq.ethereum.org. EF also presented its post-quantum security strategy and launched pq.ethereum.org. This is not just leading blockchain. No major technology platform has a published, open-source post-quantum migration roadmap at this level of detail. Ethereum is doing it before it is required, not after. Proud of the Enterprise team for putting this together. Choose Ethereum.






@MikeIppolito_ > However, if ETH is going to go up, it must earn fees. Send it to zero then. It ain't earning fees.

Today, the Foundation’s Board released the EF Mandate. This document, which was first intended for EF members, reaffirms the promise of Ethereum, and the role of EF within this ecosystem.



