Behold, the prodigal son of Ethereum, Vitalik Buterin, has declared his intention to abandon the digital gulags of centralized social media by 2026. In a post so profound it could make a philosopher weep, he lamented that platforms prioritize fleeting likes over eternal truths, while failing to illuminate the path to universal harmony. A noble quest, indeed, though one wonders if he’ll return with a manifesto or a cryptocurrency.
Buterin, ever the visionary, posits that decentralization is the panacea for all ills. Imagine a world where users are not trapped in a single platform’s prison, but instead roam freely, building their own clients like serfs in a communist utopia. A new kind of Soviet collectivization, but with more code and fewer commissars.
Decentralized Social Media
Interestingly, Buterin claims to have already fled to decentralized realms this year, wielding Firefly like a digital samurai. A multi-client platform, no less! One might say it’s the equivalent of reading a newspaper while also whispering secrets to a pigeon. Yet, he insists this is the future-where everyone can post, read, and occasionally argue about the meaning of life, all without a single algorithmic overseer.
Buterin’s critique of crypto social media is as scathing as a Tsar’s decree. He scoffs at projects that confuse speculation with innovation, likening them to a baker who sells bread made of glitter. “Money and social platforms?” he asks. “Not inherently evil, but certainly not a substitute for actual content.” Substack, he says, is a beacon of virtue-though one might argue it’s just a more expensive version of a coffee table.
He rages against the notion that creating markets is inherently virtuous, calling such claims “as convincing as a politician’s promise.” After all, who needs user benefits when you can have a token that crashes faster than a Soviet factory’s productivity? Buterin’s vision? A world where social platforms are run by teams so focused on solving problems, they’ve forgotten what a “like” is.
256 ETH Donation
In a gesture so grand it could fund a small revolution, Buterin donated 256 ETH to privacy tools. 128 ETH to Session and SimpleX, two projects so secretive they could be hiding the secrets of the universe. “Encrypted messaging is critical,” he declares, as if the entire internet hadn’t already been compromised by a single misplaced comma.
Yet, even as he champions privacy, he urges developers to tackle “remaining technical challenges”-a euphemism for “fix the bugs before the government notices.” A true patriot, this Buterin, always thinking ahead.
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2026-01-21 20:43