Vitalik Buterin says rollups must prove security before decentralizing
May 05 2025 - 6:00AM
Cointelegraph


Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has explained when he
believes rollup-based layer-2 platforms should go decentralized,
and why “as soon as possible” is not the correct answer.
In a May 5 X post,
Buterin explained that there is a right time for rollup-based
scalability solutions to transition to a decentralized model. This
moment depends on how low the proof system’s failure probability
has fallen compared with the risks introduced by
centralization.
Buterin’s thread came in response to a separate post by
decentralized exchange Loopring founder and CEO Daniel Wang. Wang
explained in his thread
that the maturity of a system matters to its security:
“Not all code is created equal. A rollup can be Stage
2, but running fresh code that’s never been tested under real
stress.“
Rollup development is classified into stages: stage zero, stage
one and stage two. Each stage is increasingly decentralized, with
stage two being fully decentralized and trustless.
Related:
Vitalik Buterin’s vision for Ethereum: Pectra,
Glamsterdam and beyond
Code that experienced war
Cryptocurrency systems that manage significant assets are
exposed to profit-motivated bad actors worldwide. Even if a project
does not feature a bug bounty program promising payments to people
who find vulnerabilities, it is still taken apart under a
microscope — it may just pay more for found faults.
This threat is growing as nation-state-backed bad actors
increase their crypto activity level. One such example is the
Lazarus hacking group, responsible for many high-profile hacks
in the crypto space, including
the $1.4 billion ByBit hack.
Wang suggested introducing a new metric for veteran code that
survived the pressure of being exposed to highly motivated advanced
hackers and hacker groups: “BattleTested.” The BattleTested badge
would be awarded to a rollup that consistently secured at least
$100 million of assets for at least six months, with at least $50
million being in Ether (ETH) and a major stablecoin.
Also, this badge would be lost at every update, as the new code
needs to survive the onslaught of attackers to earn it as well.
Buterin commented
on the analysis:
“A good reminder that stage 2 is not the only thing
that matters for security: the quality of the underlying proof
system matters too.“
Analyst at Kronos Research Dominick John told Cointelegraph that
“to responsibly transition from stage 1 to stage 2, rollup teams
must […] take a hard look at correlated risks like shared custody
weaknesses or geopolitical chokepoints that can compromise the
reliability of multisig security councils.” He said that such risks
often go unnoticed until the locked value crosses $100 million. He
added:
“The real green light for decentralization comes not
when the proof system looks good on paper, but when it proves under
real economic pressure that it’s more reliable than the potential
for coordinated failures among council members.“
Related:
Vitalik wants to make Ethereum ‘as simple as Bitcoin’
in 5 years
When to go decentralized?
Buterin explained that the best time for a protocol to go
decentralized is when its onchain proof system is safe enough for
the centralized components serving as a centralized point of
failure or collusion risk to be the bigger threat. This is because
until a system is proven to be secure enough, decentralization,
which increases the reliance on this system, may end up making the
system less secure.
Chart showing example rollup risk analysis per stage.
Source:
Vitalik Buterin
Mike Tiutin, chief technology officer at decentralized
compliance protocol PureFi, told Cointelegraph that “going
decentralized too early […] can leave users vulnerable.” John
explained that “decentralization isn’t a race, it’s a long-term
responsibility shared by the entire ecosystem.” He explained that
rushing to stage two puts ideology before safety and increases
risks:
“In stage one, councils can step in if something
breaks. In Stage 2, a single bug could wipe out billions with no
rollback.”
While going decentralized right away is recognized as
problematic, many experts highlight the issue of not going
decentralized at all. Arthur Breitman, co-founder of the Tezos
blockchain, told Cointelegraph that “prominent Ethereum L2s” are
“fundamentally custodial”:
“Privileged entities control core logic, jeopardizing
asset integrity; banking on their immunity to collusion is fragile,
and failure is likely to be correlated.“
Magazine:
What are native rollups? Full guide to Ethereum’s
latest innovation
...
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prove security before decentralizing
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Vitalik Buterin says rollups must prove security
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