Vitalik Buterin says artificial intelligence is beginning to reshape how Ethereum is built.
In a recent post on X, he described an experiment where AI was used to “vibe-code” much of Ethereum’s 2030 roadmap within weeks. He called the result impressive, while warning it remains highly experimental.
The project was completed without finishing Ethereum Improvement Proposals. That alone, he noted, means the code likely contains serious bugs. Some features may exist only as partial implementations. Six months ago, he added, even reaching this stage would have seemed impossible.
Buterin said AI tools are dramatically compressing development timelines. He recently used a locally run open-source model to recreate a version of his blog software in about an hour. Stronger models, he suggested, could complete similar builds in a single attempt.
The Ethereum roadmap focuses on scalability upgrades, stronger decentralization, and improved blockchain security. Developers are working across multiple layers of the protocol to reduce traffic and increase efficiency. Faster coding cycles could accelerate those parallel efforts.
Still, Buterin cautioned against overconfidence. A single prompt will not produce secure production code. Engineers should expect inconsistencies, edge-case failures, and structural gaps. What changes, he argued, is the speed at which those issues are identified and corrected.
Rather than using AI purely for speed, Buterin suggested redirecting part of the productivity gains toward safety. That includes generating larger volumes of test cases and expanding formal checkingefforts.
He pointed to work under LeanEthereum, a research initiative dedicated to mathematically verifying Ethereum’s core components. A partner, he said, recently used AI to construct a machine-verifiable proof for a complex theorem underlying STARK-based cryptography.
STARKs form a foundation for several zero-knowledge proof systems used to scale blockchain networks. Producing formal proofs for such systems has traditionally required significant manual effort. AI assistance is now reducing that barrier.
Formal verification relies on mathematical methods to confirm that code behaves exactly as specified. In blockchain security, that process limits weak spots that could lead to exploits or financial losses.
Buterin acknowledged that absolute, bug-free software remains impossible. Code cannot perfectly capture every human intention behind it.
However, he argued that targeted and verifiable security guarantees can eliminate the majority of practical risks.
In decentralized systems built around no need to trust others stronger verification standards reduce reliance on social coordination or manual watching. Buterin said continued advances in AI coding may push Ethereum toward higher security expectations while reducing its development horizon.
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