The Ethereum Foundation (EF) is once again facing backlash, this time being criticized by one of its own.
Péter Szilágyi, one of the lead developers of Go-Ethereum (Geth) clients, assaulted his former colleague Tomasz K. Stańczak about alleged plans to drive Geth’s development out of the organization.
Read more: Vitalik to Ethereum Foundation Critics: “This isn’t how this game works.”
This post came in response to Statzack’s assurance that “there is no plan to remove Gess.” This is triggered by Szilágyi’s previous claim that the foundation “dismissed four development teams a week ago”, with the aim of focusing on “research/education only” within a few years.
In today’s explosion, Silaghee also revealed that the indefinite “sabbatical” he announced in November was actually an e-song representation that was fired after finding “.Secret Second Guess Team“In Nethermind, another Ethereum running client founded by Stańczak.
Geth and Nethermind are two major Ethereum running clients that run on 41% and 31% of nodes, respectively, according to the organization’s Client Diversity Dashboard.
Ideally, none of the clients can have a share of more than 33%. Control over 66% is considered a “dangerous” zone of the network.
Szilágyi claims that he was offered $5 million to undertake the development of Geth as an external spinoff project, but since then I approached multiple times with the offer of a return.
Fellow developer Hearn’s pseudonymous Bunny Awards “Banteg” answered Szilágyi’s thread and wondered why he didn’t offer to go it alone.
Szilágyi reasoned as a developer: “We’re going to be shit to try to manage the company, support infurt/sic/no one, and everything’s going to fail.”
The Ethereum Foundation is not used to criticism
Last year, when two leading foundation researchers revealed the role of advisory on Eigenlayer, concerns about conflicts of interest pose arose.
The foundation also fired earlier this year when the wider Ethereum community expressed disappointment at the lack of direction in EF and the perceived inadequate performance of ether (ETH) as an asset.
Read more: Ethereum Foundation’s response to community backlash – throw away more ETH
In the wake of criticism, the foundation chose to use the money and sink it 45,000 ETH (values today’s $125 million) Part of the top protocols in the distributed finance sector.
This trend appears to continue, according to a policy announcement from the Ministry of Finance last week. This sets the “defipunk” framework for future chain development.