Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin argues that the most valuable upgrade for the world's second-largest blockchain may be learning how to stop upgrades.
Last November, Buterin reportedly argued that locking down parts of the base layer would reduce bugs and reduce the likelihood of “surprises” in a network that secures hundreds of billions of dollars worth of value.
This month, he made the same message clearer with a new framework. He argued that Ethereum should be able to continue to operate safely and usefully even if the people maintaining it no longer exist.
The standard, which he described as a “walk-away test,” aims to make the underlying protocol behave like the minimal-trust tools that Ethereum was built to host.
Ethereum is intended to be a home for trustless and trust-minimal applications, whether in finance, governance, or other areas. We need to support applications that are more like a tool (a hammer that's yours once you buy it), rather than a service that loses all functionality if the vendor loses interest in maintaining it (or worse, gets hacked or has its value extracted).
The pitch lands as a cultural linchpin for a network that has spent much of its history selling change as a feature. Ethereum’s roadmap has been defined by extensive and coordinated upgrades, from its initial recovery after the DAO crisis in 2016 to its transition to proof-of-stake in 2022.
Buterin's argument is that maturity is less about constant reinvention and more like an architecture that can survive without constant structural overhaul.
Borrow the best Bitcoin moat
Buterin’s push is most easily understood as a form of “Bitcoinization,” rather than copying Bitcoin’s feature set. Instead, it borrows from what has become BTC’s strongest institutional moat: credibility built on low risk of rule changes.
Bitcoin’s base layer has long been treated as a conservative payment system where major political changes are expensive and rare.
A slowly changing social contract is part of the product, with fewer surprises, fewer shocks to governance, and a simpler story for managers, risk committees and long-term holders.
The problem with Ethereum is that cultural minimalism alone won't get you there.
Chains are designed to host general-purpose applications and are subject to a variety of long-term failure modes. This is because state growth drives up prices for regular node operators, games are played on transactional markets, and complex block construction dynamics can centralize power.
Buterin's response to this is to try to “design” conditions that can protect stability. Do the hard work now and then get to a point where Ethereum can stop making structural changes without losing its core value proposition.
That's what he and some observers call Ethereum “hardenable,” creating a network that can be frozen rather than broken.
Ossification is not paralysis
Buterin argued that ossification need not be an all-or-nothing proposition.
“Ethereum has to get to a point where we can ossify it if we want to. We don’t have to stop making changes to the protocol, but we have to get to a point where Ethereum’s value proposition is not strictly dependent on features that don’t already exist in the protocol.”
This means that different layers of the network can slow you down at different rates. For context, the consensus layer could become more locked down while the Ethereum virtual machine running smart contracts remains more flexible, or vice versa.
Fundamentally, the practical goal is to redirect innovation from the base protocol to the surrounding ecosystem (layer 2 rollups, wallets, privacy tools, user-facing apps, etc.).
These systems can iterate faster, fail in more restrained ways, and compete in design, while Ethereum's base layer increasingly behaves like a stable payments and security foundation.
In particular, the “move fast at the edge, slow at the core” model is already emerging in Ethereum's scaling strategy. A significant portion of blockchain activity is on the layer 2 network that batches transactions and posts proofs and data back to Ethereum.
For Buterin, that division of labor is not a temporary hack, but a form of long-term system. Rollups are revolutionary. The basic chain is intentionally boring.
Still, Buterin's call for stability also reads like a critique of broader cryptocurrency culture, including parts of Ethereum, which he said favors rewarding early followers and copying what already works.
In that sense, “ossification” is not just a technical preference. This is also an attempt to protect the legitimacy of Ethereum. Once the base layer is seen as a moving target, the chain begins to look more like a vendor-managed product than a neutral infrastructure.
Ethereum reliability checklist
Considering this, walk-away framing turns Buterin’s idea into a checklist of conditions, removing the biggest reason why Ethereum could be forced into a high-stakes upgrade later on.
On January 12, Buterin highlighted milestones such as quantum resistance and a scalability architecture that can grow over time through technologies such as zero-knowledge verification and data availability sampling.
He also pointed to the need for a long-term national design that avoids unbridled growth, as well as a more general account model that can move beyond prescribed signature schemes and gas prices that are resistant to denial-of-service attacks.
He added that Ethereum needs proof-of-stake economics that can maintain decentralization and a block construction model that can remain censorship-resistant under future political and economic pressures.
In this view, the goal is not to end change, but to change the type of change that networks undergo.
Instead of frequent “BPO-style” forks that fundamentally change the structure of the chain, future evolution will increasingly come from client optimizations and parameter adjustments. These changes adjust throughput and efficiency without rewriting the social contract.
So, if Bitcoin's risk of rule changes is minimized primarily by its governance culture, Ethereum seeks to minimize risk by cutting off an entire class of future contingencies. The bet is that more carefully engineered stability could become as underwritten as Bitcoin's social stability over time.

