
Vitalik Buterin, Ethereum's (ETH) co-founder, argued Thursday that the network's greatest technical contribution is not decentralized finance or programmable contracts but its function as a censorship-resistant, publicly readable and writable data layer.
The post, published on X after attending the Real World Crypto cryptography conference, has direct implications for how the protocol's development priorities are framed.
What Buterin Said
Writing from the perspective of a maintainer of a technical tool rather than a crypto advocate, Buterin argued that a wide class of cryptographic protocols - secure online voting, certificate revocation, and software version control among them - require a shared, publicly writable place to post data blobs.
None of these require computation or smart contracts. All of them require only data availability.
He cited Ethereum's December 2025 Fusaka upgrade, which deployed PeerDAS (EIP-7594) and increased blob data availability by approximately 2.3x, with a stated path toward a further 10–100x increase.
Smart contracts, Buterin wrote, are technically reducible to zero-knowledge cryptographic proofs operating over the chain as a bulletin board - though he acknowledged that on-chain standardization produces far better interoperability in practice.
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Why It Matters
The framing is notable because it comes from Ethereum's co-founder, and it inverts the usual public narrative. Ethereum is commercially associated with DeFi, NFTs, and programmable money.
Buterin's post argues the more durable value is lower-level: a global shared memory that cryptographic systems can rely on without trusting any intermediary.
He also addressed fees directly. Transaction costs are now near-zero for many use cases, he said, and infrastructure for absorbing fee volatility - such as blob publishers that batch data on behalf of applications - has matured enough to decouple user experience from base-layer spikes.
The practical implication: applications requiring a tamper-evident public record rather than a financial product now have a credible, low-cost option in Ethereum's blob layer. Whether that use case gains traction outside the existing crypto-native developer base remains to be seen.
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