The founder of Cardano, Charles Hoskinson, launched a scathing critique against Ethereum, stating that the second largest blockchain in the crypto universe might not survive the next 15 years.

Charles Hoskinson, founder of Cardano and co-founder of Ethereum, has sounded the alarm on the future of the second-largest blockchain in the crypto universe. According to him, Ethereum might not survive the next 15 years due to questionable technological choices and flawed governance, setting the stage for a chaotic scenario.
During an "Ask Me Anything" session broadcast on April 23, Hoskinson highlighted three major design mistakes: a poor accounting model, an unsuitable virtual machine, and a poorly chosen consensus.
According to the mathematician, these technical decisions now limit Ethereum's ability to evolve. He also criticizes the addition of layer-two solutions and complex slashing mechanisms, considered ineffective: "They implemented a lot of strange stuff, but the consequences are starting to show."
For Charles Hoskinson, Ethereum's real Achilles' heel is its lack of robust on-chain governance. He believes it would take five to seven years to build an effective governance system, which is likely to drastically slow down any reform. "Vitalik will not be able to maintain network cohesion indefinitely by sheer force of will," he warns.
The founder of Cardano also compared the trajectories of Ethereum and Cardano. He highlights the technological choices of his own blockchain: a virtual machine based on RISC-V, an extended UTXO model, and scalability via Hydra and the Midnight sidechain. "We have already integrated the right decisions that Ethereum should adopt."
Charles Hoskinson predicts that fast monolithic blockchains and the rise of Bitcoin DeFi could quickly surpass Ethereum in liquidity and user experience. He mentions a risk of a "hostile divorce" between Ethereum's layer 1 and its scaling solutions.
"Ethereum is a brilliant project but a victim of its own success," concludes Charles Hoskinson. At a time when the ETH is surging 30%, without a profound overhaul of its architecture and governance, the blockchain could end up outdated, like MySpace or BlackBerry once were. A statement that shakes the crypto universe and reignites the debate on the future of major blockchains.
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