- Vitalik Buterin says the crypto industry may be overcomplicating blockchain use cases
- Ethereum’s key role could be acting as a public, verifiable data layer
- Upgrades like PeerDAS aim to expand Ethereum’s data capacity and infrastructure potential
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin believes the crypto industry might be making things more complicated than they need to be. After attending the Real World Crypto conference — a gathering mostly focused on deep cryptography research — Buterin said stepping outside the usual blockchain conversation helped him rethink what Ethereum is actually best at doing. Sometimes the answer, oddly enough, might be much simpler than the industry assumes.
Instead of starting with Ethereum and then hunting around for places to use it, Buterin suggested flipping the question entirely. Developers, he argued, should first ask what tools are required to build systems that are secure, open and resistant to censorship. Only after that should blockchains enter the conversation.

Ethereum as a Public Bulletin Board
Looking at things from that angle, Ethereum’s core function might resemble something surprisingly basic. In Buterin’s words, it can operate as what cryptographers often call a “public bulletin board.”
Many secure digital systems need a place where information can be posted openly and verified by anyone. That could include voting systems, revocation lists for digital certificates, or certain records used inside cryptographic protocols. None of those necessarily require complicated smart contracts or heavy financial transactions — they just need a shared, trustworthy place where data can live.
Ethereum already provides that environment. Anyone can publish information to the network, and anyone else can read it, verify it or build systems on top of it. It’s simple infrastructure in a way… but powerful.
New Upgrades Are Expanding Ethereum’s Data Capacity
Buterin also pointed out that recent technical upgrades are making this type of use case far more practical. One of the upgrades, known as PeerDAS, is designed to increase the amount of data Ethereum can handle and distribute across the network.
The goal, over time, is to scale that capacity significantly. If successful, it would allow Ethereum to support far more data-heavy systems without sacrificing decentralization.
In that sense, Ethereum begins to look less like just a financial network and more like a shared digital backbone — something that different technologies can plug into.

Ether Still Plays an Important Role
Even though many of these systems don’t require direct payments, some kind of economic friction is still necessary. Without it, open networks can quickly become targets for spam or abuse.
That’s where Ethereum’s native token, ether (ETH), becomes useful.
Buterin gave a simple example. Imagine a messaging app where anyone could create unlimited accounts for free. Attackers could easily flood the system with spam or malicious activity. But if creating accounts required even a tiny payment in ETH, suddenly the economics change — large-scale abuse becomes expensive.
The network stays open, but the cost barrier discourages bad actors.
Ethereum as “Global Shared Memory”
Buterin also mentioned that Ethereum could power new payment systems as well. Technologies like zero-knowledge payment channels might allow users to send small payments privately, while still benefiting from Ethereum’s security.
Smart contracts, meanwhile, still have an important place in the ecosystem. They can hold security deposits, automate agreements between parties, or enforce rules without relying on centralized intermediaries.
Put all of these pieces together and Ethereum starts to look like something broader than just a blockchain for apps or tokens. Buterin described it as a kind of “global shared memory” — infrastructure where applications can store information, exchange value and coordinate with each other across the internet.
Sometimes, the most powerful tools aren’t the most complicated ones. They’re just the ones everyone can rely on.











