Ben-Sasson’s intervention arrives at a volatile moment for Ethereum. The foundation recently saw the exit of co-executive directors Hsiao-Wei Wang and Tomasz Stańczak, fueling internal uncertainty. Simultaneously, concerns regarding a potential three-to-nine-month funding gap for core development have sparked a public clash between former contributors and skeptics like Tom Lee, who dismissed the crisis warnings entirely.
Drawing from StarkWare’s own history, Ben-Sasson noted that his team’s early development of STARKs, Cairo, and zkVM were frequently labeled as misaligned by the broader community. Rather than conforming to existing consensus, he defended those choices as necessary engineering steps toward scalability and quantum security. He contends that the current culture of labeling teams as misaligned discourages the very innovation the network requires to survive.
Ultimately, Ben-Sasson does not advocate for a specific governance overhaul, but rather a cultural pivot. He envisions an ecosystem that rewards useful engineering even when it originates outside the foundation’s preferred roadmap. By placing technical utility above political positioning, he believes Ethereum could better bridge the gap between independent layer-2 developers and the core network’s long-term objectives.

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