Ethereum (ETH) news: Upheaval at the foundation has some of crypto’s biggest names feeling bullish
In this week's edition of The Protocol Newsletter, we're looking at Ethereum's eventful week that started off with the launch of EthLabs, plus the layoffs at the Ethereum Foundation, and what this all means for the network.
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In this week's edition of The Protocol Newsletter, we're looking at Ethereum's eventful week that started off with the launch of EthLabs, plus the layoffs at the Ethereum Foundation, and what this all means for the network.
Ethereum (ETH) news: Upheaval at the foundation has some of crypto’s biggest names feeling bullish
Tech
Upheaval at the Ethereum Foundation has some of crypto’s biggest names feeling bullish
In this week's edition of The Protocol Newsletter, we're looking at Ethereum's eventful week that started off with the launch of EthLabs, plus the layoffs at the Ethereum Foundation, and what this all means for the network.
By
Margaux Nijkerk
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Edited by
Cheyenne Ligon
Jun 24, 2026, 7:52 p.m.
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Welcome to The Protocol, CoinDesk’s tech newsletter covering the most important stories in blockchain. I’m Margaux Nijkerk, a reporter at CoinDesk.
We’re revamping the newsletter to bring you a deeper look at the biggest trends, breakthroughs and debates shaping blockchain technology each week.
This week, we’re diving into Ethereum’s eventful few days that started off with the creation of EthLabs, plus the layoffs at the Ethereum Foundation, and what this all means for the network.
It’s turbulent times for the Ethereum Foundation.
Just a day
after the launch of EthLabs
, a new Ethereum research organization backed by some of the biggest ecosystem stakeholders, the EF
announced a roughly 40% budget cut
and
laid off about 20% of its workforce
. The developments prompted questions across crypto about the future of Ethereum and the health of one of the network's most influential institutions.
For some observers, the message was straightforward: organizations don't slash spending and cut jobs when everything is going well.
"This is a crisis for EF," Stacey Muur, founder of GreenD0ts,
wrote on X,
arguing that cost-cutting measures are often the first step organizations take during periods of financial stress.
Others voiced similar concerns. Crypto commentator @TheDeFiPlug
wrote on X
that the foundation's spending cuts suggested "deeper pressure on EF's spending" and speculated the move could contribute to further outflows from spot ether exchange-traded funds.
Ethereum is
faceing increasing competition from rival blockchain ecosystems
while simultaneously trying to capitalize on growing institutional demand for stablecoins, tokenized assets and onchain financial infrastructure. Yet while critics framed the week's developments as a warning sign, some of the industry's most influential voices argued precisely the opposite.
To the optimists, the launch of EthLabs and the foundation’s downsizing are not signs of an ecosystem in retreat. Instead, they represent Ethereum's transition into a more mature and institutionally decentralized network.
"We are at the edge of something remarkable for Ethereum," said Joseph Chalom, the CEO of SharpLink, one of the organizations backing EthLabs, to CoinDesk. "Institutional capital is moving onchain now, and the speed at which over 50 stakeholders stepped up to fund EthLabs says everything about ecosystem conviction in this moment."
SharpLink committed significant capital to support the initiative because it believes the protocol development work being conducted by Ethereum researchers will help accelerate institutional adoption, Chalom said.
The optimistic interpretation extends beyond Ethereum's own ecosystem.
Anatoly Yakovenko, co-founder of rival blockchain Solana, also characterized the foundation's restructuring as a positive development.
"Bullish, fr," Yakovenko
wrote on X.
"Budget constraints force prioritization and focus. Ethereum isn't going away. A smaller and leaner EF will be more decisive and will move faster and will be able to course correct faster."
Yakovenko’s comments stood out because they came from one of Ethereum's most prominent competitors. While debates between Ethereum and Solana supporters have often been contentious, Yakovenko's reaction reflected a view shared by many currently at the top of the industry: that leaner organizations can sometimes make better decisions than larger, more bureaucratic ones.
The emergence of EthLabs is particularly significant because it arrived the day before the foundation's layoffs and budget cuts, underscoring what supporters see as a broader trend: Ethereum's research and development ecosystem increasingly extending beyond the foundation itself.
"I feel that the job cuts at the EF were necessary for their budget, longevity,
and CROPs alignment,
" said Hudson Jameson, head of ecosystems at CertiK and a former employee at the Ethereum Foundation. "As sad as the layoffs are, it was an inevitability to keep the EF lean long term."
Jameson described EthLabs' launch as exciting, noting that its founding team includes respected veterans of Ethereum's research and development community. "The founding team at EthLabs are long-time, well-respected members of the Eth R&D community," he said. "I can't wait to see what they will accomplish."
For years, critics and supporters alike have debated whether Ethereum relies too heavily on the Ethereum Foundation. As the ecosystem has grown into a global network of developers, infrastructure providers, layer-2 networks, institutions and companies,
some leaders have argued
that the foundation should become less central rather than more influential.
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin
recently pushed back against
the idea that the foundation should be viewed as Ethereum's "center," instead describing its future role as "one node with a defined purpose, alongside other nodes" within a much larger ecosystem. Few have embraced that vision more forcefully than Ethereum co-founder and Consensys CEO Joe Lubin.
Lubin has
argued that since the network's inception in 2015,
it has evolved far beyond the foundation and the Ethereum mainnet itself.
"Today, Ethereum is far more than the Ethereum Foundation and Ethereum layer-1 mainnet," Lubin told CoinDesk. "There are many networks, protocols and companies that consider themselves intrinsically Ethereum, and many others that are significantly connected to core elements of Ethereum."
Lubin describes that broader ecosystem as "Metropolitan Ethereum": a growing network of independent but aligned organizations working to advance Ethereum's technology and values. He sees EthLabs as the latest example of that evolution.
"By providing a long-term, independent home to researchers and developers advancing Ethereum's core technology and values, EthLabs will be instrumental in preparing the network for the next major wave of adoption."
In Lubin's view, the week's developments point toward a future in which Ethereum becomes more resilient because responsibility is distributed across multiple institutions rather than concentrated within a single organization.
"Today and going forward, the Ethereum ecosystem will be further decentralized, enormously stronger with each steward group more focused and empowered, all while remaining credibly neutral," he said.
Read more:
Vitalik Buterin says Ethereum Foundation will cut budget 40% in major reset
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Original YayaNews editorial coverage, published for informational purposes.
This article is sourced from CoinDesk. It is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
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