He argues that governments and large corporations operate from a similar instinct: gain as much control over systems as possible while resisting control imposed by others.
That doesn’t make institutions natural enemies of cypherpunks, Buterin says, but it does make unconditional trust dangerous. Support for open systems, privacy tools, or decentralization is often selective. Institutions may back openness in one domain while quietly undermining it in another.
Buterin highlights how this pattern repeats globally. In Europe, policymakers publicly champion open-source software as a foundation for digital sovereignty, yet parallel efforts have emerged to weaken end-to-end encryption through mandatory access mechanisms. In the United States, surveillance frameworks like the Patriot Act continue with little political appetite for rollback, regardless of which party is in power.
To Buterin, these contradictions are not accidental. They reflect a consistent mindset: openness is tolerated when it doesn’t threaten authority. When it does, pressure for oversight and monitoring quickly follows.
Against that backdrop, Buterin frames Ethereum as infrastructure designed to minimize gatekeeping rather than eliminate institutions entirely. He describes it as a censorship-resistant execution layer where applications can run without needing permission, allowing developers to build alternatives to centralized exchanges, custodians, and identity systems.
The objective, he says, isn’t isolation from the traditional world but competition. Strong decentralized systems should be able to stand on their own, while still interoperating with institutions where doing so helps bootstrap broader adoption.
Buterin sees stablecoins as the next major flashpoint. Governments and corporations want digital currencies that are reliable and compliant, but they also want strong control over risk, monitoring, and rule enforcement. Geopolitics is likely to shape which blockchains different issuers prefer, potentially fragmenting liquidity across regions.
At the same time, he expects privacy technology to keep advancing. Tools such as zero-knowledge proofs could allow users to demonstrate compliance without exposing full transaction histories. These compromises, however, are likely to spark deep disagreements within the crypto community, as privacy and regulation collide.
Ultimately, Buterin argues that institutions will always seek full control over their own wallets, infrastructure, and data. That reality places responsibility on Ethereum developers and cypherpunks to ensure ordinary users continue to have access to secure, self-sovereign ways to hold and use digital money — even as institutional crypto expands.
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