Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin announced that the Ethereum Foundation (EF) is staking 72,000 ETH from the Treasury using a technology called DVT-lite. The developer said his goal is to allow any institution to do the same thing on the Ethereum network with “one click.”
“‘Operating infrastructure’ is complex and scary, and the idea that all participants have to be ‘professionals’ is scary and anti-decentralizing. we have to attack it directly« wrote the developer on his X account on March 9th.
DVT-lite, the mechanism exposed by Vitalik, is a simplified version of Distributed Validator Technology (DVT). Split control of the validator across multiple computers. Because the machines are located in different locations, no single machine has all the responsibilities, and operations cannot be interrupted if a machine fails.
DVT-lite therefore allows the Ethereum Foundation to distribute validators across multiple operators in different jurisdictions, so that even if one computer crashes, is hacked, or goes offline, other computers can continue to operate uninterrupted and without putting locked funds at risk.
What Vitalik proposes and how to explain it
For Vitalik, decentralized staking on Ethereum should function “like a Docker container,” a packaged software unit that is installed and installed. Works the same on any computer without any additional configuration.
The developer’s vision is that each staking computer installs its container, enters a shared key, and from there nodes automatically find each otherconfigure the network, complete the distributed key generation (DKG) encryption process, and start staking without any additional human intervention.
That’s the model Ethereum’s co-founders are introducing to institutions. Organizations with ETH can perform decentralized staking by simply selecting computers to run nodes and running a single command on each computer, without having to hire specialized engineers or manage complex infrastructure.
The Ethereum Foundation has already implemented that model in its own treasury. According to a statement released on February 24, EF has selected two open source programs to build its architecture.
- Dirk– Acts as a distributed signer, splitting transaction signing responsibilities between multiple operators in different geographic jurisdictions, eliminating the single point of failure that exists when a single server controls validators.
- guarantee– Manage multiple pairs of network clients simultaneously, reducing the risk that bugs or vulnerabilities in a single client will impact the entire operation.
As a result, the Foundation’s 72,000 ETH will generate native yield on ETH, directly funding research activities, protocol development, and ecosystem grants without the need to sell ETH from the treasury to cover costs.
The statement said it was a deliberate decision to expose the foundation itself to the same risks and operational frictions as other stakeholders. Setting the standard for transparency.
What other staking options are there?
First of all, traditional solo staking is the most decentralized form. You must lock a minimum of 32 ETH (currently $64,000), operate your own node with a stable connection, and assume full technical control. You have complete control over your funds and can maximize performance, but there are financial and technical barriers to entry. out of reach for most users.
Second, liquid or pool staking via protocols like Lido eliminates the 32 ETH minimum and technical complexity. Users can deposit any amount of ETH and Receive performance tokens in exchange This represents your stake and can be used in other decentralized finance (DeFi) applications. The equivalent of this is that users delegate validator operations to third parties, which increases smart contract risk and concentrates power in the hands of a few.
The third variation is staking through a centralized exchange such as Coinbase or Binance. This is the easiest option for non-technical users. The exchange manages everything, users just deposit ETH.
This is the most easily available model, but Also the most centralizedthis directly contradicts the decentralization goal described by Vitalik, as exchanges store funds and operate validators.
Ethereum Staking Today: A Growing Trend
The Ethereum staking ecosystem currently has 37.3 million ETH locked, representing 30.7% of the total supply. up to $74.6 billion.
The more ETH is locked into staking, the more Your network becomes more secure and more resistant to attacks. However, if this increased participation is concentrated among a few large carriers, the network gains security against external attacks but loses its resistance to censorship. It is precisely this tension that Vitalik aims to address by making decentralized staking more accessible to financial institutions.
(Tag Translation) Blockchain

