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Ethereum Founder Vitalik Buterin Calls for ‘Garbage Collection’ to Save the Blockchain

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By on January 18, 2026 Altcoin, Bitcoin, Regulations, Trading, Web3
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The post Ethereum Founder Vitalik Buterin Calls for ‘Garbage Collection’ to Save the Blockchain appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

Ethereum’s biggest risk may no longer be competition, regulation, or scaling. According to Vitalik Buterin, the real threat is something more subtle: complexity.

In a recent warning, Buterin argued that Ethereum’s long-term goals, trustlessness, self-sovereignty, and resilience, are being quietly undermined as the protocol grows larger, more technical, and harder to understand. His message was blunt. A blockchain does not become stronger just because it adds features. In many cases, it becomes weaker.

Why “Trustless” Breaks When Nobody Understands the Code

Ethereum is often praised for its decentralization. Thousands of nodes verify transactions, and no single party controls the network. But Buterin argues that decentralization alone is not enough.

If a protocol becomes so complex that only a small group of experts can fully understand it, trust creeps back in. Users end up trusting developers, auditors, or cryptography specialists to explain what the system does and whether it is safe. At that point, the system may be decentralized in theory, but not in practice.

Buterin calls this failing the “walkaway test.” If today’s client teams disappeared, could new developers realistically rebuild Ethereum clients from scratch and reach the same level of safety and quality? As the codebase grows and the cryptography becomes more exotic, that answer becomes less clear.

Complexity Is Also a Security Risk

Every added feature increases the number of ways different parts of the protocol can interact. Each interaction is another chance for something to break.

Buterin warns that Ethereum development has often favored adding features to solve specific problems, while rarely removing old ones. Backward compatibility makes subtraction difficult, so the protocol slowly accumulates technical debt. Over time, this bloat makes Ethereum harder to secure, harder to audit, and harder to evolve safely.

The Case for “Garbage Collection”

To counter this, Buterin calls for an explicit simplification process. Not just optimizing code, but actively removing unnecessary parts.

His idea of simplification focuses on three things: reducing total lines of code, minimizing reliance on highly complex cryptography, and strengthening core invariants, rules the protocol can always rely on. Fewer moving parts make systems easier to reason about and harder to break.

Ethereum has done this before. The move from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake was a form of large-scale cleanup. Future changes, such as leaner consensus designs or moving complexity into smart contracts instead of the core protocol, could follow the same logic.

Slowing Down to Last Longer

Perhaps the most uncomfortable part of Buterin’s argument is his conclusion. Ethereum may need to change less, not more.

He describes Ethereum’s first fifteen years as an experimental adolescence. Many ideas were tested. Some worked. Others did not. The danger now is allowing failed or outdated ideas to become permanent baggage.

If Ethereum wants to survive for decades, or even a century, Buterin suggests it must prioritize simplicity over ambition. Otherwise, the protocol risks becoming too complex to truly belong to its users.

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