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Vitalik Buterin Says Institutions Are Neither Crypto Friends Nor Foes
Source: CryptoTale Original Title: Vitalik Buterin Says Institutions Are Neither Crypto Friends Nor Foes Original Link: Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin warned that the relationship between institutions and cypherpunks is complex and requires proper understanding. In a recent post, he said governments and corporations can support openness in one area while pursuing control in another.
Buterin argued that institutions often seek stronger data sovereignty for themselves. However, he said the Ethereum community must still build tools that protect user self-sovereignty and freedom.
Vitalik Buterin on Institutions and Cypherpunks
Buterin said institutions “are neither guaranteed friend nor foe,” and he framed their incentives in game-theoretic terms. He wrote that institutions aim to control what they can, while resisting intrusion by others.
To illustrate the tension, he cited several examples. He pointed to the European Union (EU) seeking to support open source software. Meanwhile, he also cited EU efforts tied to “Chat Control,” which he described as mandating encryption backdoors.
He also referenced the U.S. Patriot Act, noting that neither major U.S. political party shows much interest in repealing it. In addition, he cited that the U.S. government is now a notable user of Signal, the encrypted messaging app.
Data Sovereignty Rises as Institutions Cut External Reliance
Buterin argued that institutions often employ sophisticated security thinking and strong internal policies. He said corporate policy can drive rejection of “data-slurping” software, even when individuals accept it.
He challenged the idea that tools maximizing user data self-sovereignty only appeal to hobbyists. Instead, he wrote that “serious people” can be more focused on robustness than retail users.
Buterin predicted institutions will push harder to reduce external trust dependencies and gain stronger guarantees over operations. Still, he cautioned that institutions do not automatically want to reduce the public’s dependence on them.
He framed that gap as a core mission for Ethereum builders. He said Ethereum developers and cypherpunks should deliver secure self-sovereign options that everyday users can actually use.
Strategic Cooperation Could Strengthen DeFi Markets
Buterin said stablecoins will become a key battlefield between compliance demands and privacy goals. He predicted EU-based issuers will prefer blockchains whose governance “center of gravity” is not overly U.S.-based, and vice versa.
He also forecasted tighter Know Your Customer (KYC) expectations from governments. At the same time, he said privacy tools will continue improving as cypherpunks work to strengthen them.
In that context, he pointed to emerging ideas like ZK (zero-knowledge) proofs for “source of funds.” He suggested institutions may pursue “ZK proof of source of funds” attempts over the next decade, while the crypto community debates how to respond.
Buterin also said institutions will want to control their own infrastructure on Ethereum. He wrote that institutions will want to control their wallets and, if they stake ETH (Ether), their staking operations too.
He argued that institutional self-custody could support the decentralization of Ethereum staking. However, he said institutions will not proactively build self-sovereign wallet tools for regular users.
Instead, he pointed to areas where Ethereum builders can push user autonomy, including smart contract wallets and social recovery. He described Ethereum as a “censorship-resistant world computer,” and he stressed that no single person decides which applications exist.
Buterin also discussed cooperation as a pragmatic strategy. He argued that Ethereum can interoperate with non-cypherpunk actors when it strengthens decentralized outcomes, including tighter spreads on decentralized stablecoins through arbitrage activity.
Buterin’s broader message framed institutions as complex actors with mixed incentives. Consequently, he positioned the Ethereum community’s task as building a financial, social, and identity layer that protects self-sovereignty, even as compliance pressure and privacy tooling evolve in parallel.