Ethereum’s Vitalik Buterin: AI Can Accelerate Development Timeline Despite Security Concerns
Ethereum’s co-founder Vitalik Buterin revealed that artificial intelligence tools are pushing development timelines forward at an unexpectedly rapid pace on the blockchain network.
Following through on a wager made in February, a developer leveraged AI technology to create a working prototype of Ethereum’s complete development roadmap extending to 2030—achieving this milestone in mere weeks. Buterin described the achievement as “quite an impressive experiment” in a weekend post on X.
He advised developers to invest only half their AI-derived time savings into accelerated delivery, dedicating the remainder to security enhancements. This includes expanding test case coverage, implementing formal verification processes, and developing redundant implementations of each system component.
On Sunday, Buterin released an in-depth technical analysis of two fundamental architectural transformations he considers essential for Ethereum’s evolution.
The first involves migrating from the existing hexary Keccak Merkle Patricia Tree to a binary state tree structure specified in EIP-7864. This enhancement proposal has been in draft status since January 2025.
The binary architecture would generate Merkle branches 75% shorter than current implementations. Modifying the hash function could potentially boost proving efficiency by factors ranging from 3x to 100x.
Verkle Trees were initially under consideration for a 2026 hard fork implementation, but emerging quantum computing threats prompted a strategic pivot toward binary trees around the middle of 2024.
The second transformation entails substituting the EVM with RISC-V, the open-source instruction architecture already utilized by most zero-knowledge provers. Buterin initially floated this concept in April 2025.
Research teams from Offchain Labs, the organization developing Arbitrum, released a counter-argument in November 2025 contending that WebAssembly represents a superior long-term alternative to RISC-V for Ethereum’s smart contract infrastructure.
Buterin asserted these two architectural changes collectively address more than 80% of Ethereum’s proving performance constraints, rendering both modifications “basically mandatory.”
Ethereum’s Glamsterdam upgrade is targeted for the first half of 2026, with the Hegota upgrade following in the latter portion of that year. Development teams have yet to confirm the primary EIP for either hard fork.
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