Key Highlights
- Vitalik Buterin said Ethereum may be most valuable as a public, permissionless data layer.
- The idea emerged after discussions at the Real World Crypto Conference about blockchain use cases.
- Buterin argued that many systems need reliable public data storage, not complex smart contracts.
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has suggested that the blockchain’s most important role may not be smart contracts or payments, but acting as a public bulletin board for data.
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In an X post on Thursday, Buterin said discussions at the Real World Crypto Conference prompted him to reconsider how blockchains are typically framed within the crypto ecosystem.
According to Buterin, developers often begin with the assumption that Ethereum must be applied to a wide range of use cases. Instead, he argued that the network should be viewed simply as a tool within a broader ecosystem of privacy-focused and open-source technologies.
From that perspective, he said, Ethereum’s strongest value may lie in providing a public, permissionless data layer.
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Smart contracts as a supporting layer
While Ethereum is widely known for smart contracts, Buterin described them as one component within a broader technical stack rather than the network’s primary purpose.
Smart contracts can be used to manage security deposits, where funds are locked and automatically destroyed if protocol rules are violated. They can also support systems such as payment channels and digital objects that represent real-world or social entities.
In theory, some of these functions could operate without smart contracts using cryptographic proofs alone. However, Buterin said standardized on-chain programs make systems easier to build and integrate.
Ethereum as a “public bulletin board”
Buterin pointed out that many cryptographic systems require a shared, publicly accessible place to publish data. Examples include secure voting systems, certificate revocation lists, and software version control systems. Such systems do not necessarily require complex computation or smart contract logic. Instead, they depend on reliable data availability and public verification.
Ethereum’s recent upgrades aimed at increasing data throughput could support that role. Improvements such as PeerDAS have expanded the amount of data the network can store and distribute, with plans to increase capacity further.
From this viewpoint, Ethereum functions less as a programmable financial platform and more as a global shared memory system where data can be publicly recorded and verified.
Payments as infrastructure for anti-spam
Buterin also emphasized the importance of payments within decentralized systems, particularly as a way to prevent spam and abuse. In many protocols, small payments are required to access services or publish data. These fees discourage automated spam attacks and ensure that participants bear the cost of using network resources.
He suggested that Ethereum, combined with zero-knowledge payment channels, could form a payment layer for services such as APIs. These systems would allow applications to charge small amounts for access without relying on centralized payment providers.
Moreover, payments using Ether could serve as a Sybil resistance mechanism, limiting the creation of large numbers of fake accounts in decentralized applications.
What it means
Buterin’s comments reflect a shift in how Ethereum’s long-term role is being discussed. Rather than focusing mainly on decentralized finance or complex smart contracts, the network may increasingly be viewed as foundational infrastructure for data availability, payments, and cryptographic coordination.
If that framing gains traction, Ethereum’s development priorities could place greater emphasis on scaling data capacity and maintaining low transaction costs, supporting applications that rely on the network as a shared, censorship-resistant information layer.
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