ETH

Ethereum price
ETH
#2

$2,370.88  

0.38% (24h)

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Ethereum statistics

Market cap
$286.13B

0.38%

Volume (24h)
$17.04B

17.73%

Vol/Mkt Cap (24h)
5.96%
FDV
$286.13B
Total supply
120.68M ETH
Max. supply
Circulating supply
120.68M ETH
Profile score
100%
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ETH
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Price performance
24h 
Low
$2,354.57
High
$2,398.83
All-time high
Aug 25, 2025 (8m ago)
$4,953.73
-52.16%
All-time low
Oct 22, 2015 (11y ago)
$0.4209
+562938.87%
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CoinBites: Ethereum - The Swiss Army Knife of Blockchain
CoinBites by CMC: Your 3-Minute Crypto Crash Course! 🚀💡 Grasp Ethereum's impact, 📜 smart contracts, and role in 💰 DeFi, 🎨 NFTs, and 🏢 asset tokenization. Explore Ethereum and every crypto at CoinMarketCap.com. 🔍
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Price
+2% / -2% Depth
Volume (24h)
Volume %
Liquidity
1

Binance

$2,368.97
$25,693,283/$15,972,199
$632,863,332
3.71%
1,058
2

Binance

$2,368.94
$4,671,067/$4,518,318
$308,742,116
1.81%
909
3

Coinbase Exchange

$2,370.27
$16,826,743/$9,638,348
$251,833,820
1.48%
859
4

Upbit

$2,391.68
$1,849,189/$2,471,807
$96,489,472
0.57%
685
5

Aster

$2,369.75
$169,663/$191,390
$1,177,270
<0.01%
601
6

OKX

$2,370.49
$2,874,079/$3,625,346
$215,557,484
1.26%
835
7

Bybit

$2,370.73
$8,664,522/$9,463,928
$217,066,363
1.27%
804
8

Bitget

$2,370.51
$1,196,600/$1,178,611
$106,635,497
0.63%
797
9

Gate

$2,369.01
$6,865,654/$8,559,019
$267,785,573
1.57%
906
10

KuCoin

$2,370.45
$1,536,904/$1,961,151
$198,745,313
1.17%
815
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$ETH Prediction for May 7
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Ethereum Is Testing the Line Again: Breakout or Rejection? 👀


Ethereum is entering May with real momentum, while $BTC keeps the broader market focused on major breakout levels. ETH just closed April up 7.3%, marking its second green month in a row. 💰


Now the big question is simple: can $ETH finally break through $2,375?👇


🔹 The Level: Ethereum is testing the top of its channel near $2,375, a zone that rejected price several times before.


🔹 The Setup: In my opinion, this test is different because repeated resistance touches often make the level weaker over time.


🔹 The Target: If ETH closes strongly above $2,375, I believe the next move could open the path toward $2,550, around 7% higher from here.


With spot Ethereum ETFs seeing $23.5M in net inflows last week, institutional interest is quietly supporting the setup. But if ETH fails again, $2,210 becomes the key support to watch. Is May about to trigger another Ethereum rally?


#ETH #BTC Price Analysis#

#Altcoin Season#

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VinCoop
· 16h

DeFi Property Rights: Aave Fights U.S. Court Seizure of Stolen $71M $ETH ⚖🛡


In a landmark legal battle, Aave has filed an emergency request to block a U.S. court from seizing $71M in $ETH tied to a North Korean exploit. 🚀 While Arbitrum’s Security Council successfully froze the funds after the KelpDAO hack, creditors with terrorism-related claims against North Korea are now trying to claim these assets as "state property" to settle judgments.


Aave’s stance is firm: "A thief does not own what he steals." 🛡 The company argues that the assets belong to the exploited users, not the hackers or outside claimants. This case is a critical test for DeFi governance - it decides whether "recovery pools" become identifiable targets for unrelated creditors or remain protected zones for victim restitution.


The outcome will set a massive precedent for the legal "visibility" of DAOs in the U.S. court system. ⚙

#Altcoin Season# #ETH #Ethereum #DeFi

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🚀 Base Goes Institutional: Centrifuge Partnership to Tokenize Real-World Assets


Coinbase is going all-in on Real-World Assets (RWA)! The exchange just tapped Centrifuge as its primary tokenization partner to bring traditional assets like ETFs, credit funds, and even equities onto the Base network. 🏦


This isn't just a partnership; it’s a strategic overhaul. Centrifuge will provide the institutional-grade infrastructure to turn "off-chain" value into tradable, onchain liquidity. The goal? Making recognizable financial products - and potentially even COIN stock - accessible via DeFi rails.


While Base currently holds ~$240M in RWAs (ranking 14th), it is already the most active $ETH L2. By combining Centrifuge’s compliance-first tech with Coinbase’s massive retail and institutional distribution, we are seeing the "bridge" to the BTC -led financial future being built in real-time.


The era of 24/7 tradable, onchain traditional finance has arrived.


#ETH #Altcoin Season#

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I get the bearish mid-term view on$ETH, but liquidity structure still looks messy for a clean breakdown for now.


What would confirm for you guys that downside is actually starting now?


#ETH #ETHBlockchain

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The market has been moving in a very tight range lately and collecting liquidity with sudden moves. Prices aren’t really offering trades on higher timeframes, so for lower timeframes it’s necessary to look for additional confirmations.


On the #Ethereum side, the situation is the same, but my mid-term expectation is already that a drop will come. I’m starting to build positions from these areas with low leverage, risking a total of 2R.


For now, I’m planning $ETH to run the trade without a stop. If sharp upward moves come, I’ll act accordingly.

#ETH

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laucrypto
· 15h

Bitcoin ETFs and Ethereum ETFs Record $593.6 Million in Inflows


Bitcoin spot ETFs and Ethereum spot ETFs recorded inflows, with the largest coming from BTC.


$BTC spot ETFs recorded $532.30 million in inflows, while $ETH spot ETFs recorded $61.30 million in inflows.


#Bitcoin #Ethereum

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While Bitcoin’s busy stealing the headlines near $81k, $ETH is quietly setting up for its own breakout. We’ve been bouncing off the $2,320 support, and right now, Ether is grinding hard to flip $2,400.


The hourly chart looks solid—we’re trading comfortably above the 100-hourly SMA with a bullish trend line holding at $2,350. If the bulls can keep their footing here, a clean daily close above $2,375/$2,400 is the trigger we’ve been waiting for.


The Targets: Once $2,400 turns into support, expect a quick test of $2,420. If we clear that, the path to **$2,500** and **$2,550** opens right up. Historically, May is a monster month for Ethereum (remember that 41% rally last year?), and with exchange reserves hitting record lows, a supply squeeze is brewing. 📈


The Risk: If we get rejected at $2,400 again, don't panic. We’ve got decent cushions at $2,350 and $2,330. Only a break below $2,310 threatens the local structure.


My Take: The macro backdrop is messy, but Wall Street tokenization and ETF inflows are keeping the floor solid. I’m leaning bullish here. 🚀


Are you buying this accumulation phase or waiting for a deeper Q2 dip? Let me know below! 👇

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About Ethereum

Explain with CMC AI

What Is Ethereum (ETH)?

Ethereum is a decentralized open-source blockchain system that features its own cryptocurrency, Ether. ETH works as a platform for numerous other cryptocurrencies, as well as for the execution of decentralized smart contracts.

Ethereum was first described in a 2013 whitepaper by Vitalik Buterin. Buterin, along with other co-founders, secured funding for the project in an online public crowd sale in the summer of 2014. The project team managed to raise $18.3 million in Bitcoin, and Ethereum’s price in the Initial Coin Offering (ICO) was $0.311, with over 60 million Ether sold. Taking Ethereum’s price now, this puts the return on investment (ROI) at an annualized rate of over 270%, essentially almost quadrupling your investment every year since the summer of 2014.

The Ethereum Foundation officially launched the blockchain on July 30, 2015, under the prototype codenamed “Frontier.” Since then, there has been several network updates — “Constantinople” on Feb. 28, 2019, “Istanbul” on Dec. 8, 2019, “Muir Glacier” on Jan. 2, 2020, “Berlin” on April 14, 2021, and most recently on Aug. 5, 2021, the “London” hard fork.

Ethereum’s own purported goal is to become a global platform for decentralized applications, allowing users from all over the world to write and run software that is resistant to censorship, downtime and fraud.

Who Are the Founders of Ethereum?

Ethereum has a total of eight co-founders — an unusually large number for a crypto project. They first met on June 7, 2014, in Zug, Switzerland.

  • Russian-Canadian Vitalik Buterin is perhaps the best known of the bunch. He authored the original white paper that first described Ethereum in 2013 and still works on improving the platform to this day. Prior to ETH, Buterin co-founded and wrote for the Bitcoin Magazine news website.
  • British programmer Gavin Wood is arguably the second most important co-founder of ETH, as he coded the first technical implementation of Ethereum in the C++ programming language, proposed Ethereum’s native programming language Solidity and was the first chief technology officer of the Ethereum Foundation. Before Ethereum, Wood was a research scientist at Microsoft. Afterward, he moved on to establish the Web3 Foundation.

Among the other co-founders of Ethereum are: - Anthony Di Iorio, who underwrote the project during its early stage of development. - Charles Hoskinson, who played the principal role in establishing the Swiss-based Ethereum Foundation and its legal framework. - Mihai Alisie, who provided assistance in establishing the Ethereum Foundation. - Joseph Lubin, a Canadian entrepreneur, who, like Di Iorio, has helped fund Ethereum during its early days, and later founded an incubator for startups based on ETH called ConsenSys. - Amir Chetrit, who helped co-found Ethereum but stepped away from it early into the development.

What Makes Ethereum Unique?

Ethereum has pioneered the concept of a blockchain smart contract platform. Smart contracts are computer programs that automatically execute the actions necessary to fulfill an agreement between several parties on the internet. They were designed to reduce the need for trusted intermediates between contractors, thus reducing transaction costs while also increasing transaction reliability.

Ethereum’s principal innovation was designing a platform that allowed it to execute smart contracts using the blockchain, which further reinforces the already existing benefits of smart contract technology. Ethereum’s blockchain was designed, according to co-founder Gavin Wood, as a sort of “one computer for the entire planet,” theoretically able to make any program more robust, censorship-resistant and less prone to fraud by running it on a globally distributed network of public nodes.

In addition to smart contracts, Ethereum’s blockchain is able to host other cryptocurrencies, called “tokens,” through the use of its ERC-20 compatibility standard. In fact, this has been the most common use for the ETH platform so far: to date, more than 280,000 ERC-20-compliant tokens have been launched. Over 40 of these make the top-100 cryptocurrencies by market capitalization, for example, USDT, LINK and BNB. Since the emergence of Play2Earn games, there has been a substantial increase in interest in the ETH to PHP price.

What is Ethereum Name Service?

Ethereum Name Service, aka ENS, is a distributed and extensible naming system based on the Ethereum blockchain. It is essentially the Web3 version of DNS, short for domain name service.

In its original state, a cryptocurrency address consists of a long string of numbers and letters designed to be read by computers. It may look like this — “0xDC25EF3F5B8A186998338A2ADA83795FBA2D695E” — making it confusing at times to read, and in some cases even leading to loss of funds.

ENS provides a solution to this problem of long and confusing crypto addresses by assigning human-readable names to machine-readable identifiers such as Ethereum addresses, metadata, other cryptocurrency addresses and content hashes. With ENS, the long address above could become something as simple as “Alice.eth,” and you can receive any type of cryptocurrency or NFT via your ENS domain.

ENS is based on two Ethereum smart contracts. The first is the ENS registry, which records three critical pieces of information: the owner of the domain, the resolver for the domain and the caching time for all records under the domain. The second smart contract is the Resolver, which translates the domain name to a machine-readable address and vice-versa.

It is worth adding that in addition to integrating with .eth names, ENS also supports the most popular DNS names, including .com, .org, .io, .app and several others.

What is an Ethereum Killer?

Since its inception, Ethereum has maintained its spot as the second-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization. But like every other blockchain network that exists, Ethereum is not perfect. Notable, the legacy blockchain is plagued with high gas fees and low throughput of between 15 to 30 transactions per second.

Although plans are already on the way to solve these shortcomings through several upgrades, many competitors have capitalized on this delay to offer crypto users cheaper and faster transactions.

The term “Ethereum Killer” emerged around 2016/2017 as substitute blockchains such as Cardano began to enter the crypto scene. In 2018, EOS made its debut as the next “Ethereum killer,” raising $4.1 billion from investors, the highest amount an ICO had ever generated. Since then, others like Tezos, Solana, Fantom, Avalanche and Binance Smart Chain have surfaced as possible Ethereum killers.

Each of these blockchains employs a different consensus model to tackle Ethereum’s PoW-induced limitations. For instance, Solana uses proof-of-history (PoH) while Binance Smart Chain utilizes both proof-of-authority (PoA) and delegated proof-of-stake (DPoS).

However, none of these alternative blockchains have been able to unseat Ethereum as the second-largest cryptocurrency by market cap. Ethereum is also currently the largest blockchain for NFT trading activities.

What Is EIP-1559?

The EIP-1559 upgrade introduces a mechanism that changes the way gas fees are estimated on the Ethereum blockchain. Before the upgrade, users had to participate in an open auction for their transactions to be picked up by a miner. This process is known as a “first-price auction,” and as expected, the highest bidder wins.

With EIP-1559, this process is handled by an automated bidding system, and there is a set “base fee” for transactions to be included in the next block. This fee varies based on how congested the network is. Furthermore, users who wish to speed up their transactions can pay a “priority fee” to a miner for faster inclusion.

EIP-1559 also introduces a fee-burning mechanism. A part of every transaction fee (the base fee) is burned and removed out of circulation. This is intended to lower the circulating supply of Ether and potentially increase the value of the token over time.

Interestingly, less than two months after the London upgrade was implemented, the network had burned over $1 billion worth of Ether.

How Many Ethereum (ETH) Coins Are There In Circulation?

In September 2021, there were around 117.5 million ETH coins in circulation, 72 million of which were issued in the genesis block — the first ever block on the Ethereum blockchain. Of these 72 million, 60 million were allocated to the initial contributors to the 2014 crowd sale that funded the project, and 12 million were given to the development fund.

The remaining amount has been issued in the form of block rewards to the miners on the Ethereum network. The original reward in 2015 was 5 ETH per block, which later went down to 3 ETH in late 2017 and then to 2 ETH in early 2019. The average time it takes to mine an Ethereum block is around 13-15 seconds.

In the August 2021 Ethereum network upgrade, the London hard fork contained the Ethereum Improvement Protocol, EIP-1559. Instead of the first-price auction mechanism where the highest bidder wins, EIP-1559 introduces a “base fee” for transactions to be included in the next block. Users that want to have their transaction prioritized can pay a “tip” or “priority fee” to miners. As the base fee adjusts dynamically with transaction activity, this reduces the volatility of Ethereum gas fees, although it does not reduce the price, which is notoriously high during peak congestion on the network.

One of the major differences between Bitcoin and Ethereum’s economics is that the latter is not deflationary, i.e. its total supply is not limited. Ethereum’s developers justify this by not wanting to have a “fixed security budget” for the network. Being able to adjust ETH’s issuance rate via consensus allows the network to maintain the minimum issuance needed for adequate security.

With the introduction of EIP-1559 however, the base fees used in transactions are burned, removing the ETH from circulation. This means higher activity on the network would lead to more ETH burned, and the decreasing supply should lead to appreciation of Ethereum price, all things equal. This has the potential to make Ethereum deflationary, something ETH holders are excited about — a potential appreciation in Ethereum price today.

How Is the Ethereum Network Secured?

As of August 2020, Ethereum is secured via the Ethash proof-of-work algorithm, belonging to the Keccak family of hash functions.

There are plans, however, to transition the network to a proof-of-stake algorithm tied to the major Ethereum 2.0 update, which launched in late 2020.

After the Ethereum 2.0 Beacon Chain (Phase 0) went live in the beginning of December 2020, it became possible to begin staking on the Ethereum 2.0 network. An Ethereum stake is when you deposit ETH (32 ETH is required to activate validator software) on Ethereum 2.0 by sending it to a deposit contract, thus helping to secure the network by storing data, processing transactions and adding new blocks to the blockchain. At the time of writing in mid-September 2021, the Ethereum price now for 32 Ether is roughly $116,029. The amount of money earned by Ethereum validators right now is a return of 6% APR, which equates to around 1.91952 ETH, or $6960 in Ethereum price today. This number will change as the network develops and the amount of stakers (validators) increase.

Ethereum staking rewards are determined by a distribution curve (the participation and average percent of stakers): some ETH 2.0 staking rewards were at 20% for early stakers, but will be lowered to end up between 7% and 4.5% annually.

The minimum requirements for an Ethereum stake are 32 ETH. If you decide to stake in Ethereum 2.0, it means that your Ethererum stake will be locked up on the network for months, if not years, in the future until the Ethereum 2.0 upgrade is completed.

Where Can You Buy Ethereum (ETH)?

Given the fact that Ethereum is the second-largest cryptocurrency after Bitcoin, it is possible to buy Ethereum, or use ETH trading pairs on nearly all of the major crypto exchanges. Some of the largest markets include:

Popular Ethereum price pairs include: ETH/USD, ETH/GBP, ETH/AUD and ETH/JPY.

Ethereum London Hard Fork

The Ethereum network has been plagued with high transaction fees, often spiking at seasons of high demand. In May 2021, the average transaction fee of the network peaked at $71.72.

In addition to the high cost of transactions, the leading altcoin also suffers from scalability issues.

As already mentioned, there are plans to transition to a proof-of-stake algorithm in order to boost the platform’s scalability and add a number of new features. The development team has already begun the transition process to ETH 2.0, implementing some upgrades along the way, including the London hard fork.

The London upgrade went live in August 2021. It included five Ethereum Improvement Proposals (EIPs), namely EIP-3529, EIP-3198, EIP-3541, and most notably EIP-1559 and EIP-3554.

EIP-1559 is arguably the most popular upgrade out of all the EIPs.

Ethereum 2.0

In 2022, Ethereum plans to switch to proof-of-stake with its Ethereum 2.0 update. This switch has been in the Ethereum roadmap since the network's inception and would see a new consensus mechanism, as well as introduce sharding as a scaling solution. The current Ethereum chain will become the Beacon Chain and serve as a settlement layer for smart contract interactions on other chains.

In late 2021, Ethereum's Arrow Glacier update was delayed to June 2022. Until then, Vitalik Buterin expects the road to the network's endgame to be shaped by optimistic rollups and Zk-rollups.

In January 2022, the Ethereum Foundation announced the decision to remove the “Ethereum 2.0” terminology to “save all future users from navigating this confusing mental model.” It went on to explain that the previously-referred-to terms of “Ethereum 1.0” would be branded the “execution layer,” while “Ethereum 2.0” will be called the “consensus layer”. This is ultimately to provide a more accurate version of the Ethereum roadmap.

In an update on the progress of the Merge, on April 13, 2022, Ethereum developer Tim Beiko tweeted an update on the progress of the Merge, stating that they are “definitely in the final chapter of PoW on Ethereum.” He also mentioned that users can expect it to occur a few months after June, although no exact date was provided. This came on the back of the first mainnet shadow fork — to test the transition to PoS on Ethereum — that was successfully implemented on April 11, 2022.

The Ethereum Merge

In 2022, Ethereum renamed its transition from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake from Ethereum 2.0 to The Merge. The Merge went live on Sept. 15, 2022, after the merge of the Goerli testnet successfully completed on Aug. 11, 2022.

Read: All you ever wanted to learn about the Ethereum Merge.

The Merge implements several critical changes to Ethereum. First, it merges the existing PoW Ethereum mainnet with the Beacon Chain, a PoS chain. Together, the two chains will form the new proof-of-stake Ethereum, which will consist of a consensus layer and an execution layer. The consensus layer will synchronize the chain state across the network, while the execution layer handles transactions and block production.

Second, the Merge significantly reduces ETH issuance. This has been dubbed the "triple halving" in a nod to the Bitcoin halving, since the Merge reduces ETH issuance by 90%. With more than 14M ETH already staked, ETH could very well become deflationary after the transition. Furthermore, stakers are expected to earn between 8% and 12% APR at current projections. Staked ETH will not be withdrawable immediately after the Merge — it will only be enabled after the Shanghai upgrade, estimated to be 6 to 12 months later.

Learn more about the common misconceptions of Ethereum post-Merge.

The Merge will not increase transaction throughput or reduce gas fees, as the block production rate stays roughly the same at 12 seconds (currently 13 seconds). It will also not enable on-chain governance, with protocol changes still discussed and decided off-chain through stakeholders.

Importantly, the transition to PoS is expected to reduce Ethereum's annual energy consumption from 112 TWh/yr to only 0.01 TWh/yr — a 99.9% drop. This reduction prompted investors to expect an influx of institutional money in a "greener" Ethereum. On the flip side, Ethereum miners, in an industry estimated to be worth $19 billion, seek to champion ETHPoW, a potential hard fork of Ethereum on proof-of-work. We explain the main differences in our ETH PoS vs ETH PoW article.

Ethereum Shanghai Upgrade

The biggest Ethereum upgrade since The Merge, the Shanghai Upgrade will allow ETH stakers to unstake their ETH and withdraw ETH rewards from the Beacon Chain. During The Merge, the Ethereum proof-of-work chain merged with the proof-of-stake Beacon Chain. Instead of mining, validators stake 32 ETH to secure the network. However, stakers are unable to unstake and withdraw until the Shanghai Upgrade.

The Shanghai/Capella (“Shapella”) Upgrade is a hard fork that will implement five EIPs — the most anticipated being EIP-4895, which will enable withdrawals. Shanghai is the hard fork’s name on the execution layer, while Capella is the name on the consensus layer.

On Feb. 7, 2023, withdrawals on the Zhejiang testnet were enabled, and on Feb. 28, the Sepolia testnet successfully executed the hard fork upgrade. On March 15, 2023, the hard fork was executed on the Goerli testnet, the last test run before the mainnet upgrade, expected to happen sometime in March 2023. Over 17.5 million ETH will become available for withdrawals.

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Ethereum Whitepaper Summary

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Overview

Ethereum is like a giant global computer that anyone can use to create and run applications that work without any central authority controlling them. Think of it as a platform where you can build digital services that run exactly as programmed, without any possibility of downtime, censorship, or outside interference. The system uses its own currency called Ether to pay for using the network. Since its inception, Ethereum has grown to become the leading platform for decentralized applications (dApps) and decentralized finance (DeFi). This revolutionary technology has transformed how we think about digital ownership and online transactions.

Technology

At its heart, Ethereum works like a really smart record-keeping system that everyone can trust. Instead of having one company's computers running everything, thousands of computers around the world work together to keep the system running.

The special thing about Ethereum is that it lets people write 'smart contracts' - these are like digital agreements that automatically do what they're supposed to do without needing anyone to manage them. Imagine if your bank account could automatically pay your rent every month without any bank being involved - that's the kind of thing Ethereum makes possible. These smart contracts can be used for everything from simple payments to complex financial services.

The system uses something called the Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM), which is like a giant shared computer that runs these smart contracts. Every time someone wants to do something on Ethereum, they have to pay a small fee called 'gas' to use this virtual computer. This helps prevent spam and makes sure the network runs smoothly.

With the transition to Proof of Stake, the network now processes transactions through validators instead of miners, making it more energy-efficient and accessible. This change has made Ethereum much more environmentally friendly while maintaining its security and reliability.

Tokenomics

Ether (ETH) is the main currency used in Ethereum. You need it to do anything on the network, kind of like needing tokens to play games at an arcade.

When you want to use an Ethereum application or send money to someone, you pay a small fee in ETH. These fees now go to validators who help keep the network running by processing transactions and securing the system. The more people use the network, the more valuable ETH tends to become.

Unlike Bitcoin which has a fixed supply, Ethereum's supply can change based on network needs and community decisions. The introduction of EIP-1559 in 2021 made ETH partially deflationary, meaning some ETH gets destroyed with every transaction. This helps maintain the value of ETH over time.

Since the merge to Proof of Stake in 2022, new ETH issuance has been reduced by approximately 90%, making the asset more scarce. The current annual issuance rate varies based on the number of ETH being staked. This system ensures that those who help secure the network are rewarded while keeping inflation in check.

Roadmap

Ethereum successfully completed its most significant upgrade, 'The Merge,' in September 2022, transitioning from proof of work to proof of stake. This change reduced the network's energy consumption by over 99% while maintaining security.

The next major phase of development focuses on scaling solutions through 'sharding' and 'layer 2' technologies. Sharding will split the network into multiple parallel chains to increase transaction capacity and reduce fees. This will make Ethereum faster and cheaper to use for everyone.

The upcoming Shanghai upgrade will enable staked ETH withdrawals and introduce further optimizations. Future developments include 'proto-danksharding' and 'EIP-4844' which aim to make transactions significantly cheaper. These improvements will help make Ethereum more accessible to everyday users.

The long-term vision includes making Ethereum more accessible, sustainable, and capable of handling global-scale applications. The development team is constantly working on new ways to improve the network's speed, security, and usability.

Team

Ethereum was first proposed by Vitalik Buterin in 2013 when he was just 19 years old. The project was officially launched in 2015 by a group of co-founders including Vitalik Buterin, Charles Hoskinson, and Gavin Wood.

Today, Ethereum is developed by a large community of developers from around the world. The Ethereum Foundation, a non-profit organization, helps coordinate development but doesn't control the network. Instead, changes to Ethereum are decided by the community through a process of discussion and voting.

The development community has grown significantly, with multiple teams working on different aspects of the protocol. Key development groups include the Ethereum Foundation, ConsenSys, and numerous independent teams contributing to core protocol development and ecosystem tools. This decentralized approach to development helps ensure that no single group has too much control over the network's future.

 
 
 
 
 
 

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