Ethereum breakaway developers turn a funding gap into a fight over who steers the network

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Ethereum breakaway developers turn a funding gap into a fight over who steers the network


On June 22, five former senior Ethereum Foundation researchers announced Ethlabs, an independent nonprofit R&D lab with a mission to make Ethereum the settlement layer of the global economy.

The co-founders, Ansgar Dietrichs, Barnabé Monnot, Caspar Schwarz-Schilling, Josh Rudolf, and Julian Ma, framed the launch around Ethereum, the protocol, and ETH, the asset.

Their announcement names ETH “the most valuable, programmable store of value” and lists research into ETH monetary properties among Ethlabs’ early work areas, a posture the Foundation, in its traditional credible-neutrality framing, avoided taking directly.

The backer list includes BitMine and SharpLink, two ETH treasury companies whose public-market narratives depend on ETH being treated as institutional-grade capital, and lists them as supporters alongside Joseph Lubin, Anchorage, Octant, and SNZ.

Funders will have accountability but not control over the research agenda, with final direction resting with Ethlabs leadership, quarterly reporting, and independent annual audits.

Ethlabs component What it shows Why it matters
Founders Five former senior Ethereum Foundation researchers Gives the lab protocol credibility and makes it part of the EF succession story
Mission Make Ethereum the settlement layer of the global economy Frames Ethlabs around adoption, not just public-goods maintenance
ETH language Calls ETH a programmable store of value and includes ETH monetary research Makes ETH value capture explicit in a way the EF has historically avoided
Backers BitMine, SharpLink, Joe Lubin, Anchorage, Octant, SNZ Shows support from ETH-aligned capital, institutions, and ecosystem power centers
Governance guardrails Funders get accountability but not control; Ethlabs sets the research agenda Addresses the key legitimacy risk: capital-backed stewardship without sponsor capture

The vacuum Ethlabs is walking into

Trent Van Epps, a former EF contributor, published an essay arguing that the Foundation succeeded in communicating that it should not be Ethereum’s sole center of power, but has not clearly defined who inherits responsibility when it steps back.

He warned of a potential core protocol funding crisis within three to nine months, estimating that core capacity requires around $30 million annually across client teams, research, and coordination.

Van Epps noted that the EF needs a full reset of the social, political, and economic contracts between stakeholders, extending well beyond reducing its own footprint.

That matches what became visible through individual departures before the Ethlabs announcement. Several co-founders posted directly that they were leaving the EF to join the new lab.

Yuga Cohler said he was sad to see dysfunction at the Foundation and that it was losing leaders faster than it could replace them. Dankrad Feist said the people leaving still believe in the EF’s stated strategy, placing the failure squarely in management execution.

Ethlabs is one answer to the funding and legitimacy gap Van Epps described: an independent lab formed by former EF researchers, targeting the specific areas that the EF’s narrowing mandate leaves exposed.

ETH value capture becomes a protocol goal

ETH treasury companies are now funding Ethereum R&D, and their business models create explicit alignment between the protocol’s success and the ETH price.

BitMine disclosed annualized ETH staking revenue of approximately $258 million in a June 2026 SEC-filed release. If firms like BitMine directed even a fraction of their staking revenue toward public-goods research, the math would cover a meaningful share of the $30 million annual core-dev figure Van Epps cited.

Funding Ethereum R&D turns ETH treasury firms into actors in Ethereum’s political economy, with incentives to push the protocol toward outcomes that increase ETH’s institutional utility via settlement finality, monetary clarity, and DeFi liquidity depth.

Marc Zeller responded that Ethereum will be fine even if the EF hits a wall, because others will pick up the work.

Haseeb Qureshi framed it from the venture side as EF builders spinning out while the Foundation narrows its mandate. Joe Lubin described the emerging structure as a network of “steward nodes,” a multi-node future, which is exactly the language in Ethlabs’ own announcement.

Ethereum carries roughly $157 billion in stablecoin market cap and about $14.9 billion in active RWA market cap, per DefiLlama data. Stablecoins, tokenized assets, DeFi, and eventually AI-agent commerce all require neutral settlement infrastructure.

Ethereum’s ETH-aligned funders are backing Ethlabs because their holdings gain value if Ethereum wins institutional settlement and their preferred base layer holds that position against competing L1s or L2s.

How ETH-aligned capital could close Ethereum's R&D funding gapHow ETH-aligned capital could close Ethereum's R&D funding gap
BitMine’s $258 million in annualized ETH staking revenue is more than eight times Ethereum’s estimated $30 million annual core-dev funding need.

What the bull and bear cases look like

The bull case holds that Ethlabs represents the first real institutional answer to Van Epps’ succession problem.

Former EF researchers bring protocol credibility, ETH-aligned capital brings funding and urgency, and the nonprofit structure with independent governance keeps the research agenda from being captured by any single sponsor.

If the multi-node stewardship model produces coordinated R&D without roadmap capture, Ethereum gains execution capacity while preserving the credible neutrality that makes it defensible as a global settlement infrastructure.

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