The post Buterin Names Ethereum’s Most Important Property appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has opined that incorruptibility is the blockchain’s most important property. The billionaire prodigy has once again amplified the ZKSync project on social media, which serves as the scaling solution for the Layer-1 network. ZK-rollups help to dramatically reduce gas fees and speed up transactions. The ZKSync Atlas upgrade, which was launched earlier this October, makes it possible to process up to 30,000 transactions per second (TPS). Earlier, Buterin opined that ZKsync had been doing a lot of underrated and valuable work within the ecosystem. Is Ethereum actually incorruptible? That said, JAN3 CEO Samson Mow, one of the most vocal Bitcoin enthusiasts, argues that the ship had already sailed with Ethereum Classic (ETC), the original chain that did not implement the DAO hard fork back in 2016 following the infamous hack. You Might Also Like Some Bitcoin proponents also took issue with Ethereum’s premine and the lack of a supply cap. Other critics also took issue with the fact that the blockchain had ditched proof of stake. One commentator has also noted that Ethereum heavily relies on Layer-2s, which makes it rather vulnerable. “Ethereum L1 is practically incorruptible. But L2s are not there yet. And since Ethereum’s long-term strategy relies on L2s, we cannot call Ethereum fully incorruptible until they mature,” one commentator said. Source: https://u.today/buterin-names-ethereums-most-important-propertyThe post Buterin Names Ethereum’s Most Important Property appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has opined that incorruptibility is the blockchain’s most important property. The billionaire prodigy has once again amplified the ZKSync project on social media, which serves as the scaling solution for the Layer-1 network. ZK-rollups help to dramatically reduce gas fees and speed up transactions. The ZKSync Atlas upgrade, which was launched earlier this October, makes it possible to process up to 30,000 transactions per second (TPS). Earlier, Buterin opined that ZKsync had been doing a lot of underrated and valuable work within the ecosystem. Is Ethereum actually incorruptible? That said, JAN3 CEO Samson Mow, one of the most vocal Bitcoin enthusiasts, argues that the ship had already sailed with Ethereum Classic (ETC), the original chain that did not implement the DAO hard fork back in 2016 following the infamous hack. You Might Also Like Some Bitcoin proponents also took issue with Ethereum’s premine and the lack of a supply cap. Other critics also took issue with the fact that the blockchain had ditched proof of stake. One commentator has also noted that Ethereum heavily relies on Layer-2s, which makes it rather vulnerable. “Ethereum L1 is practically incorruptible. But L2s are not there yet. And since Ethereum’s long-term strategy relies on L2s, we cannot call Ethereum fully incorruptible until they mature,” one commentator said. Source: https://u.today/buterin-names-ethereums-most-important-property

Buterin Names Ethereum’s Most Important Property

2025/11/02 19:23

Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has opined that incorruptibility is the blockchain’s most important property.

The billionaire prodigy has once again amplified the ZKSync project on social media, which serves as the scaling solution for the Layer-1 network. ZK-rollups help to dramatically reduce gas fees and speed up transactions.

The ZKSync Atlas upgrade, which was launched earlier this October, makes it possible to process up to 30,000 transactions per second (TPS).

Earlier, Buterin opined that ZKsync had been doing a lot of underrated and valuable work within the ecosystem.

Is Ethereum actually incorruptible?

That said, JAN3 CEO Samson Mow, one of the most vocal Bitcoin enthusiasts, argues that the ship had already sailed with Ethereum Classic (ETC), the original chain that did not implement the DAO hard fork back in 2016 following the infamous hack.

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Some Bitcoin proponents also took issue with Ethereum’s premine and the lack of a supply cap.

Other critics also took issue with the fact that the blockchain had ditched proof of stake.

One commentator has also noted that Ethereum heavily relies on Layer-2s, which makes it rather vulnerable. “Ethereum L1 is practically incorruptible. But L2s are not there yet. And since Ethereum’s long-term strategy relies on L2s, we cannot call Ethereum fully incorruptible until they mature,” one commentator said.

Source: https://u.today/buterin-names-ethereums-most-important-property

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lessons from Malta’s Papaya case

lessons from Malta’s Papaya case

The post lessons from Malta’s Papaya case appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. SPONSORED POST* Standfirst: In August 2025, Malta became the unlikely stage for a clash between a fintech firm and one of the island’s most powerful newspapers. Papaya Ltd’s response – measured, legalistic, and paired with concrete operational moves, now stands as a case study in how financial institutions can build resilience under pressure. Drawing on the joint expertise of Lincoln’s Inn barrister (UK)  Hamna Zain and former Deutsche Bank professional Davor Zilic (croatian fintech specialist), this article examines what happened, and what it tells us about the uneasy balance between law, journalism and finance. In early August 2025, Papaya Ltd – a licensed Maltese electronic money institution (EMI), found itself in the eye of a media storm. The Times of Malta, the country’s largest daily, sent the company a list of probing questions which, Papaya argued, would have forced it to reveal confidential information from a 2021 compliance audit. The firm turned to the courts, asking for a temporary injunction to prevent publication. A judge granted a temporary protective measure pending a full hearing on its request for an injunction, that blocked the newspaper from publishing an as-yet-unwritten article about the company. The request for a substantive injunction was ultimately refused on 12 August. This legal action, triggered after one of the newspaper’s journalists sent questions to Papaya, prompted heated debate about press freedom, censorship, and the responsibilities of both media and financial firms. The headlines were immediate and emotive. “Times of Malta hit by court ‘gagging order’ from e-money firm”. “We’ve been gagged. This is why it matters.” For days, the injunction was portrayed as an assault on press freedom. The newspaper itself argued that “preventing a journalist from publishing a story is recognised in all democratic countries as illegal and a violation of the journalist’s fundamental right to…
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BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/20 23:05