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#CryptoMarketBouncesBack
Vitalik Buterin proposes a solution to simplify node setup on Ethereum.
On Saturday, Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin shared a pull request (PTR) proposing to unify the backend programs used by nodes to interact with the protocol's execution layer and the Beacon Chain, which handles Ethereum's consensus and staking operations, into a single, unified code structure. The goal is to simplify node setup.
Currently, Ethereum node operators, or validators, have to run two separate programs. Each of these programs requires setup and synchronization to coordinate and communicate with each other regarding the data generated by Ethereum's consensus and execution layers.
This increases the technical complexity of running a node or providing validation services for the Ethereum network, preventing ordinary users from running their own infrastructure and creating reliance on third-party service providers.
Buterin stated in his post, “I feel like we’ve implicitly decided, at every level, that running a node is such a daunting DevOps task that it can be left to professionals.” He continued:
“That’s not the case. We need to reverse this. Running your own Ethereum infrastructure should be a fundamental right for every individual and every household. The excuse that ‘hardware requirements are high, so DevOps skills and time requirements are also normal’ is unacceptable.”
Buterin said that even those who can afford the high-end computing hardware and technical expertise required to build an Ethereum node often don’t have the time to do so, and that “nodes should be easy.”
The Ethereum network and other smart contract blockchains have faced criticism due to the technical complexity and hardware requirements of running nodes. This has also raised concerns about centralization on these networks.
Buterin proposes partially stateless nodes to further decentralize the network.
In May 2025, Buterin proposed partially stateless nodes that do not retain the entire block history and only store data needed by the node operator.
This approach reduces hardware costs and data storage requirements for users running nodes for personal purposes such as sending transactions and verifying the blockchain.
According to Go-Ethereum (GETH), disk space is often the primary bottleneck for node operators. Smart contract blockchain networks like Ethereum generate large amounts of data requiring increasingly larger storage spaces, making dedicated node hardware necessary.
Buterin wrote, “A market structure dominated by a handful of remote procedure call providers, or RPC providers, will face strong pressure to push users off the platform or censor them. Many RPC providers are already excluding entire countries.”
In late January, Buterin stated that he had set aside approximately $45 million worth of his personal assets—16,384 Ether—to support privacy-preserving technologies, open hardware, and secure, verifiable software. He added that these funds would be used gradually over the coming years as the Ethereum Foundation enters what he describes as a “period of mild austerity” while pursuing its technical roadmap.
$ETH