
The Ethereum Foundation has formally established a dedicated DeFi unit within its App Relations team to support protocol development, appointing industry builders Charles St. Louis as DeFi Protocol Specialist and ivangbi as DeFi Coordinator. The non-profit organization’s structural move, announced on Monday, aims to accelerate development of permissionless and privacy-focused decentralized finance applications while creating formal channels for builder coordination and security research.
The Ethereum Foundation (EF), the primary non-profit organization supporting the Ethereum blockchain, announced the formation of a specialized DeFi unit under its Ecosystem Acceleration division. The new team operates within the App Relations group led by Jason Chaskin, according to the EF’s organizational chart.
This initiative represents a continuation of the Foundation’s broader restructuring efforts initiated in 2024 to improve resource allocation and clarify Ethereum’s development roadmap. The EF has faced growing community scrutiny regarding its funding priorities and organizational efficiency as competing layer-1 blockchains intensify development competition.
Charles St. Louis, former CEO of DELV (formerly Element Finance) and a former MakerDAO governance architect, has been appointed as DeFi Protocol Specialist. His background includes work on the DAI stablecoin system and fixed-rate yield protocol development from 2018 to 2025.
Ivan, co-founder of Gearbox Protocol, joins as DeFi Coordinator. His experience spans modular lending infrastructure development and community building within Ethereum’s DeFi ecosystem since 2018.
Both appointees report through the App Relations team structure, which serves as a liaison between the Foundation and application-layer developers building on Ethereum.
The newly formed unit explicitly advocates for “DeFipunk” principles—a development philosophy rooted in cypherpunk values emphasizing permissionless access, censorship resistance, privacy preservation, self-custody, and open-source code requirements.
According to the Foundation’s announcement, the team will pursue a dual-track approach:
Current DeFi support: Working with existing protocols to strengthen security frameworks, improve auditing practices, and reduce systemic vulnerabilities including interface risks, oracle dependencies, and multi-signature control mechanisms.
Future DeFi development: Exploring speculative applications including user-controlled AI integration with onchain futures markets, futarchy-based DAO structures, and zero-knowledge proof-enabled private undercollateralized lending protocols.
The DeFi unit’s work program encompasses five primary areas:
Builder coordination: Establishing formal communication channels between DeFi teams and the EF, facilitating application-layer feedback to core protocol developers.
Security enhancement: Supporting improved auditing standards, runtime protection mechanisms, and architectural patterns that reduce reliance on discretionary multi-signature controls.
Decentralization advocacy: Promoting open-source, composable code standards and governance experimentation beyond default implementation models.
Privacy infrastructure: Collaborating with the EF’s Privacy Cluster (reorganized in 2024) to develop privacy-preserving DeFi primitives, beginning with token payment privacy before expanding to complex use cases.
Standards development: Creating consistent frameworks for vault implementations, tokenization, real-world asset integration, and risk disclosure formats.
This organizational development occurs as decentralized finance faces increased regulatory scrutiny from global financial authorities, including ongoing enforcement actions by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission regarding unregistered securities offerings and compliance failures.
The EF’s explicit commitment to permissionless and censorship-resistant design principles positions its development priorities against emerging regulatory frameworks, particularly the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) and proposed U.S. stablecoin legislation.
The Ethereum Foundation established the DeFi unit to formally coordinate protocol development support, security research, and builder relationships. The move follows a 2024 organizational restructuring aimed at improving resource allocation and communication of Ethereum’s development priorities. The unit creates structured channels for DeFi teams to connect with the Foundation and core developers.
Charles St. Louis, former DELV CEO and MakerDAO governance architect, serves as DeFi Protocol Specialist. Ivan (ivangbi), Gearbox Protocol co-founder, serves as DeFi Coordinator. Both report through Jason Chaskin’s App Relations team within the Foundation’s Ecosystem Acceleration division.
The team focuses on five priorities: builder relationships and communication channels, security enhancement and vulnerability reduction, decentralization and open-source advocacy, privacy infrastructure development, and standards creation for tokenization and risk disclosure. The unit supports both existing DeFi protocols and experimental applications including AI-integrated finance and zero-knowledge proof-based lending.
Related Articles
Ethereum Foundation Formalizes DeFi Strategy With New Protocol Support Unit
Whale "0x4A2" Deposits Additional $2M USDC to HyperLiquid, Expands ETH and SOL Long Positions
A whale deposits 2 million USDC into Hyperliquid to increase long positions in ETH and SOL.
Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs Record Net Outflows While Solana ETFs See Inflows on Feb 24