Ethereum Co-Founder Vitalik Buterin is making the case for a “walkaway test,” while activity across the network rests with a small group of large application builders.
On the other hand, Tom Lee’s Bitmine pushed its Ethereum exposure past $13 billion this week.
Confidence in the network is coming from its existing ecosystem.
A test for survival
Buterin wants Ethereum to reach a point where it can survive even if active development slows or stops.
In a recent post on X, he argued that Ethereum should work “more like tools,” rather than services; something users can rely on without relying on constant updates or a central group of maintainers.
“Do the right thing once, based on knowledge of what is truly the right thing… and maximize Ethereum’s technological and social robustness for the long term.”
That idea, which he calls the “walkaway test,” means the network’s value should come from what is already built into the protocol today. To get there, Buterin set out long-term goals such as stronger security and scalability, and a design that can last for decades.
Adding to this…
Source: https://ambcrypto.com/understanding-ethereums-walkaway-test-who-really-keeps-the-network-alive/



