#深度创作营 Ethereum's "Heart Bypass": Vitalik Launches a Cleanup Campaign Against Wall Street Algorithms
If you take a quick look at Etherscan right now, you'll find a chilling fact: at this very moment, the so-called "global decentralized computing platform" Ethereum is actually steered by only two and a half "people." This sounds like a bad joke, but the data doesn't lie. Over the past week, block builders Beaverbuild and Titan Builder, like voracious whales, have packaged over 50% and sometimes up to 80% of blocks. What does this mean? It means that if you initiate a transaction on the chain, your so-called "decentralized freedom" is actually determined by the algorithms of these two companies. This isn't Web3; it's essentially a Nasdaq high-frequency trading dark pool disguised as blockchain. Vitalik Buterin has clearly also realized this. His recent proposal for PBS (Proposer-Builder Separation) is no longer a gentle technical upgrade but a surgical operation targeting these invisible oligarchs, even a "heart bypass" to uproot vested interests.
Hidden Taxes and On-Chain Casinos: The Greedy Logic of MEV This story starts with money, and it's the kind of money you can't see on your bill. After Ethereum transitioned to the PoS mechanism, mining with GPUs was no longer necessary, but greed didn't disappear—it just shifted its battleground. Today, Ethereum is like a busy stock exchange, and "block builders" are the super market makers here. They possess a god-like perspective privilege called MEV (Maximum Extractable Value). Simply put, when you want to buy a token on Uniswap, these builders can see your intent milliseconds faster than you can. Then, an absurd scene unfolds: before your transaction even hits the chain, the builder's bots buy in first to push up the price. Once you buy at a high price, they flip and sell to you at a profit. This "sandwich attack" is like ordering lobster at a restaurant, hearing the waiter say they’ll get the last lobster, then rushing into the kitchen to buy it, and finally marking up 20% to sell to you. This isn't just disgusting; it's outright robbery. The current situation is that the more ruthless the algorithm, the more they can snatch, and the more they snatch, the more they can pay validators (validators) to monopolize block packaging rights. This creates a deadly vicious cycle: the more money-making the builders are, the more they monopolize; the more they monopolize, the easier it is for them to snatch money. Vitalik's current anger is that this "toxic MEV" is turning Ethereum into an extremely unfriendly dark forest for ordinary users. If left unchecked, Ethereum could ultimately become a private chain controlled by a few Wall Street quant funds.
Surgical Scalpel and Riot Shield: The Game Theory of PBS Vitalik's approach to solving this problem is very "engineer thinking," but also full of political cunning. His core proposal is to fully implement and strengthen PBS (Proposer-Builder Separation). It's like completely isolating the restaurant owner (proposer) from the chef (builder). Previously, chefs not only cooked but also decided who could dine. Now, the owner is reclaiming power. Under the new design logic, especially with the introduction of concepts like "Inclusion Lists," while complex dishes are still prepared by professional chefs (builders), the owner (proposer/validator) can enforce that certain dishes (user transactions) must be included in the menu. This move is extremely ruthless. It recognizes that "building blocks" indeed requires highly specialized hardware and algorithms—ordinary validators can't do it, so let the professionals handle it (tolerating centralization of builders). But through protocol-level code restrictions, it strips builders of the power to "review transactions." If a builder refuses to include a marked transaction (for example, from an address sanctioned by the US OFAC), the entire block is invalidated. This effectively downgrades builders from "powerful controllers" to "pure high-level workers." Vitalik is essentially telling the giants: you can make money, run algorithm competitions, but don't try to control the network, and definitely don't act as power agents by censoring transactions. This is a very clever check and balance of power, using code's enforceability to counteract capital's monopoly.
Life-and-Death Race: The Last Line of Defense Against Censorship Don't think this is just tech nerds' self-indulgence; it concerns Ethereum's survival. As cryptocurrencies enter the traditional financial realm through ETFs, regulatory tightening is underway. If block building rights become highly concentrated in just two or three entities, regulators can simply call the CEOs of these companies or issue subpoenas, and the entire Ethereum network could instantly become a heavily regulated local network. This is no exaggeration. During the Tornado Cash sanctions, over 60% of blocks were actively cooperating with censorship. Vitalik's renewed emphasis on PBS and decentralized building is actually about constructing Ethereum's "antifragile system." By dispersing the power to "pack transactions" to thousands of validators like grains of sand, and leaving only the "ordering" work to a few builders, Ethereum is trying to find that golden balance between efficiency and censorship resistance. If this battle is lost, Ethereum will no longer be the immutable world computer but will become a low-efficiency, expensive AWS cloud service. The fight over block control appears to be a code upgrade but is actually the final showdown between crypto punk spirit and Wall Street capital logic. The time left for Vitalik to steer the course is actually running out.
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ShizukaKazu
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Stay strong and HODL💎
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ShizukaKazu
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Volatility is an opportunity 📊
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ShizukaKazu
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Hop on board!🚗
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ShizukaKazu
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2026 Go Go Go 👊
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ShizukaKazu
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Wishing you great wealth in the Year of the Horse 🐴
#深度创作营 Ethereum's "Heart Bypass": Vitalik Launches a Cleanup Campaign Against Wall Street Algorithms
If you take a quick look at Etherscan right now, you'll find a chilling fact: at this very moment, the so-called "global decentralized computing platform" Ethereum is actually steered by only two and a half "people." This sounds like a bad joke, but the data doesn't lie. Over the past week, block builders Beaverbuild and Titan Builder, like voracious whales, have packaged over 50% and sometimes up to 80% of blocks.
What does this mean? It means that if you initiate a transaction on the chain, your so-called "decentralized freedom" is actually determined by the algorithms of these two companies. This isn't Web3; it's essentially a Nasdaq high-frequency trading dark pool disguised as blockchain. Vitalik Buterin has clearly also realized this. His recent proposal for PBS (Proposer-Builder Separation) is no longer a gentle technical upgrade but a surgical operation targeting these invisible oligarchs, even a "heart bypass" to uproot vested interests.
Hidden Taxes and On-Chain Casinos: The Greedy Logic of MEV
This story starts with money, and it's the kind of money you can't see on your bill. After Ethereum transitioned to the PoS mechanism, mining with GPUs was no longer necessary, but greed didn't disappear—it just shifted its battleground. Today, Ethereum is like a busy stock exchange, and "block builders" are the super market makers here. They possess a god-like perspective privilege called MEV (Maximum Extractable Value).
Simply put, when you want to buy a token on Uniswap, these builders can see your intent milliseconds faster than you can.
Then, an absurd scene unfolds: before your transaction even hits the chain, the builder's bots buy in first to push up the price. Once you buy at a high price, they flip and sell to you at a profit. This "sandwich attack" is like ordering lobster at a restaurant, hearing the waiter say they’ll get the last lobster, then rushing into the kitchen to buy it, and finally marking up 20% to sell to you. This isn't just disgusting; it's outright robbery. The current situation is that the more ruthless the algorithm, the more they can snatch, and the more they snatch, the more they can pay validators (validators) to monopolize block packaging rights. This creates a deadly vicious cycle: the more money-making the builders are, the more they monopolize; the more they monopolize, the easier it is for them to snatch money.
Vitalik's current anger is that this "toxic MEV" is turning Ethereum into an extremely unfriendly dark forest for ordinary users. If left unchecked, Ethereum could ultimately become a private chain controlled by a few Wall Street quant funds.
Surgical Scalpel and Riot Shield: The Game Theory of PBS
Vitalik's approach to solving this problem is very "engineer thinking," but also full of political cunning. His core proposal is to fully implement and strengthen PBS (Proposer-Builder Separation). It's like completely isolating the restaurant owner (proposer) from the chef (builder). Previously, chefs not only cooked but also decided who could dine. Now, the owner is reclaiming power. Under the new design logic, especially with the introduction of concepts like "Inclusion Lists," while complex dishes are still prepared by professional chefs (builders), the owner (proposer/validator) can enforce that certain dishes (user transactions) must be included in the menu.
This move is extremely ruthless. It recognizes that "building blocks" indeed requires highly specialized hardware and algorithms—ordinary validators can't do it, so let the professionals handle it (tolerating centralization of builders). But through protocol-level code restrictions, it strips builders of the power to "review transactions." If a builder refuses to include a marked transaction (for example, from an address sanctioned by the US OFAC), the entire block is invalidated. This effectively downgrades builders from "powerful controllers" to "pure high-level workers."
Vitalik is essentially telling the giants: you can make money, run algorithm competitions, but don't try to control the network, and definitely don't act as power agents by censoring transactions. This is a very clever check and balance of power, using code's enforceability to counteract capital's monopoly.
Life-and-Death Race: The Last Line of Defense Against Censorship
Don't think this is just tech nerds' self-indulgence; it concerns Ethereum's survival. As cryptocurrencies enter the traditional financial realm through ETFs, regulatory tightening is underway. If block building rights become highly concentrated in just two or three entities, regulators can simply call the CEOs of these companies or issue subpoenas, and the entire Ethereum network could instantly become a heavily regulated local network. This is no exaggeration. During the Tornado Cash sanctions, over 60% of blocks were actively cooperating with censorship.
Vitalik's renewed emphasis on PBS and decentralized building is actually about constructing Ethereum's "antifragile system." By dispersing the power to "pack transactions" to thousands of validators like grains of sand, and leaving only the "ordering" work to a few builders, Ethereum is trying to find that golden balance between efficiency and censorship resistance.
If this battle is lost, Ethereum will no longer be the immutable world computer but will become a low-efficiency, expensive AWS cloud service. The fight over block control appears to be a code upgrade but is actually the final showdown between crypto punk spirit and Wall Street capital logic. The time left for Vitalik to steer the course is actually running out.