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Just caught something interesting about how Ethereum's actually being repositioned at a pretty fundamental level. Vitalik's been talking about this idea that ETH's real strength isn't just smart contracts or payments—it's functioning as a globally accessible, censorship-resistant data layer that protocols can anchor to. Think of it like a shared bulletin board that everyone can read and write to, but it's secured by actual economic incentives.
What struck me about this framing is how it resets the conversation. Vitalik's pointing out that a ton of high-value use cases—voting systems, identity management, certificate revocation, governance coordination—don't actually need complex contract logic. They need something simpler: a public, permanent space to publish and reference data. That's where ETH comes in as the collateral and Sybil resistance mechanism holding the whole thing together.
The practical side is already moving. PeerDAS is pushing Ethereum's data capacity up by roughly 2.3x right now, with the roadmap showing potential for 10-100x improvements down the line. That's not just about throughput—it opens the door for applications way beyond DeFi. Governance tools, identity systems, new coordination primitives. All the stuff that needs reliable, neutral data availability.
What's interesting is how this reframes what developers should be thinking about. Instead of treating Ethereum as primarily a smart contract execution engine, the narrative is: start with it as durable, uncensorable data infrastructure, and build applications on top of that foundation. DeFi and other stuff becomes secondary to that base layer.
If this scaling trajectory holds, we could see a pretty different ecosystem emerge around Ethereum over the next couple years.