The Ethereum Foundation has unveiled the ‘trillion dollar security dashboard,’ a new initiative that showcases the network’s six most important dimensions, displaying what it has excelled on and what needs to improve.
In its announcement on X, the Foundation called on the network’s developers to pitch in with their feedback and contributions to make the dashboard better.
Many users welcomed the initiative, lauding the network for being transparent enough to admit that it had some insufficiencies which need improvement.
The dashboard displays Ethereum’s six most important dimensions: user experience, smart contracts, infrastructure and cloud security, consensus protocol, monitoring and incident response, and social layer and governance.
It’s the latest effort to boost Ethereum adoption as the Foundation works with other stakeholders to cement the network’s position as the ultimate smart contract protocol. As we reported, the core developers have started work on the Hegota upgrade, which is scheduled to take priority once the Glamsterdam upgrade is implemented this year. The network has also welcomed ERC-8004, a new standard for agentic AI interaction and communication in a trustless environment.
The Foundation says that the dashboard, “makes Ethereum’s security measurable, drives and communicates its security posture across the entire ecosystem — ensuring it can scale as neutral, open infrastructure for the internet and global economy.”
Image courtesy of Trillion Dollar Security.
On user experience, the Foundation acknowledged the importance of user-facing security surfaces, saying they directly shape security outcomes. These include key management, privacy, permissions and transaction readability. The Foundation believes the network has performed well in this area with 29 controls across all stages, with 13 ongoing and 8 in research.
On smart contract security, it claims to have 13 controls across all stages, four being live. The priority work in this area is the Verifier Alliance, which provides easy and unified access to the source-code for EVM contracts, and whose members include Blockscout and Routescan.
Smart contracts are especially vulnerable because logic errors, upgrade mechanisms and privileged roles can be exploited long after deployment. Developers also get to rewrite the custom security modules for their projects, which can introduce latent bugs.
Consensus protocol security is also critical for Ethereum, and the network currently has 15 controls. While client distribution is publicly monitored, one client has previously exceeded the 33% threshold, risking centralization. Relying on a single client “increases the risk of correlated failures that threaten liveness or safety.”
There has also been a concentration of staking power among a small set of validators which can lead to coordinated failure risk and increase the chances of censorship.
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