Vitalik Buterin has called for a reassessment of how blockchain-based democratic systems are designed and deployed, arguing that growing global disillusionment with democratic institutions is reshaping how decentralized governance should evolve.
In a recent post on X, the Ethereum co-founder said the crypto industry may need to reconsider its expectations around governance experiments such as decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs), blockchain-based voting systems, and quadratic funding mechanisms.
Buterin noted that enthusiasm for building large-scale democratic systems on blockchain appears to be fading as global politics and corporate governance trends shift toward more centralized power structures.
One thing that it is worth re-thinking is our perspective on when, and how, it makes sense to build “democratic things”. This includes:
* DAOs and voting mechanisms in DAOs
* Quadratic and other funding gadgets
* ZKpassport voting use cases, incl freedomtool type stuff, incl…— vitalik.eth (@VitalikButerin) March 8, 2026
Disillusionment with democratic governance
According to Buterin, the decline in optimism around democratic mechanisms extends beyond national politics into technology companies, social platforms, and decentralized ecosystems.
He pointed to governance models commonly discussed in crypto, including DAOs, quadratic funding, and identity-based voting tools such as ZK-based digital identity systems, as examples of initiatives that once carried strong momentum but now face skepticism.
The change, he said, reflects broader frustration with democratic decision-making processes, which some critics view as slow, inefficient, or vulnerable to manipulation. Buterin added that defending democratic governance increasingly resembles a conservative effort to preserve existing systems rather than a forward-looking reform movement.
Shift toward consensus-finding tools
Buterin suggested that blockchain governance may need to adapt to what he described as a more “chaotic era,” where large-scale institutional reforms are harder to implement.
Instead of building rigid on-chain voting systems designed to control decisions directly, he proposed focusing on tools that help communities identify areas of broad consensus. These tools could include anonymous polling systems, collective signalling mechanisms, and platforms that surface widely supported proposals for influential decision-makers to adopt.
Buterin highlighted the potential of emerging technologies, including zero-knowledge cryptography, artificial intelligence, and stronger cybersecurity frameworks, to improve how decentralized communities coordinate and express collective preferences.
In addition, he proposed replacing the Casper FFG with a simpler finality system called Minimmit in Ethereum. Unlike Casper FFG, which requires two rounds of validator signatures to finalize blocks, Minimmit requires only one, making the process more efficient while lowering fault tolerance from 33% to 17%. Buterin argues the tradeoff is acceptable because censorship poses a greater risk than finality reversion, and Minimmit would require more than 83% of stake to finalize malicious blocks, giving the network more time to detect issues and coordinate recovery.
Buterin also referenced the Ethereum Foundation’s “Strawman” roadmap, signalling expectations for progressively shorter slot and finality times as upgrades continue.
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