The Ethereum Foundation has released a new mandate that outlines its mission, core principles, and long term role in supporting the Ethereum ecosystem while gradually reducing its influence.
The Ethereum Foundation released a detailed mandate document explaining how it plans to guide the development of the Ethereum ecosystem while maintaining its decentralized structure. The publication outlines the foundation’s philosophy and clarifies that the organization does not own or control the blockchain.
The document also describes the foundation’s long term objective of eventually becoming less central to Ethereum’s development as the ecosystem continues to mature.
The Ethereum Foundation, a nonprofit organization closely associated with the development of Ethereum, published a 38 page strategic document outlining its responsibilities and guiding philosophy.
In the mandate, the foundation emphasizes that it is not the authority controlling Ethereum. Instead, it describes itself as an early steward and coordinator supporting the network’s research, development, and ecosystem growth.
The document clearly states:
“The Ethereum Foundation is the original steward of the Ethereum project. The Foundation is not the parent, owner, or ruler of Ethereum. We are not ‘the system’ itself.“
According to the foundation, Ethereum’s purpose is closely tied to the concept of self sovereignty, which means individuals should retain control over their digital identities, assets, and actions without relying on centralized intermediaries.
“The first aim is to ensure Ethereum becomes and stays a decentralized and resilient tool for self sovereignty,” the mandate states. “Our first fundamental principle is that a user has the final say over their identities, assets, actions, and agents.”
The mandate outlines several fundamental properties that must remain central to Ethereum’s development. These principles are described as essential for preserving user freedom and maintaining the blockchain’s open infrastructure.
The foundation highlights four critical characteristics known as CROPS:
“We hold that these properties – CROPS – must remain, as an indivisible whole, the sine qua non of all Ethereum’s development priorities, which cannot be displaced,” the document states.
The foundation believes maintaining these principles will ensure Ethereum continues to function as open digital infrastructure that protects individual autonomy in an increasingly centralized digital world.
One of the most notable aspects of the mandate is the foundation’s view that its own importance should gradually decrease as the Ethereum ecosystem grows.
Rather than expanding its authority, the organization says its success will be measured by how unnecessary it eventually becomes.
“Our goal is to reduce the Foundation’s relative influence over time,” the team wrote. “Subtraction is rather a process of ensuring Ethereum’s maturity: a trajectory of growth with decentralization, robust enough to outgrow and outlast us.“
For now, the foundation plans to focus on areas that are less likely to attract commercial funding, including:
The document also introduces a concept called the walkaway test, which suggests Ethereum should eventually become strong enough to function even if the foundation and current developers were no longer involved.
“Our ultimate goal is for Ethereum to pass the walkaway test: its protocol and core application layers become robust and trustless enough that they would continue to reliably function and evolve even if the Foundation and today’s core developers disappeared tomorrow.”
The mandate arrives during a challenging period for the Ethereum ecosystem, particularly around the network’s long term scaling strategy.
Earlier this year, Ethereum co founder Vitalik Buterin suggested that the current approach relying heavily on layer two networks may need significant changes.
Buterin said:
Buterin also raised concerns that many layer two networks include centralized components such as private trusted networks or centralized sequencers.
According to him, a system that claims high transaction throughput but relies on centralized bridges does not truly achieve decentralized scaling.
Instead, Buterin suggested that many layer two projects may eventually specialize in specific niches such as privacy solutions, identity tools, financial applications, or social platforms.
In my experience covering crypto ecosystems, this mandate feels like a maturity signal for Ethereum. Rather than trying to control the network, the Ethereum Foundation is openly acknowledging that the ecosystem must eventually stand on its own.
I found the “walkaway test” concept particularly powerful. A blockchain that can continue evolving even if its founding organization disappears is the ultimate proof of decentralization. If Ethereum actually achieves that level of resilience, it will reinforce its position as one of the most important pieces of open digital infrastructure in the crypto industry.
At the same time, the debate around scaling and layer two networks shows that Ethereum’s development journey is far from finished. The ecosystem is still experimenting with the best path forward while trying to maintain its founding values of freedom, decentralization, and user ownership.
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