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- The Ethereum Foundation released a Mandate outlining its long-term role within the protocol's ecosystem.
- The document introduces Censorship Resistance, Open Source, Privacy, and Security (CROPS) as guiding principles for Ethereum's development.
- The EF said its aim is for Ethereum to eventually operate independently, even without its involvement or that of current core developers.
The Ethereum Foundation (EF) has released a 38-page Mandate outlining its long-term governance approach and role within the Ethereum ecosystem. Published on Friday, the document is intended to serve as a guiding framework for the Foundation as Ethereum continues to evolve.
EF outlines its role in Ethereum's future
The Mandate reiterates the Foundation's view that the Ethereum network should function as a neutral infrastructure layer rather than a platform controlled by any single entity.
A guiding principle of the Mandate is for Ethereum to operate with the underlying framework of Censorship Resistance, Open Source, Privacy and Security (CROPS).
According to the Foundation, these principles represent core attributes that should guide Ethereum's development and determine its success. The document frames them as essential safeguards intended to prevent centralization, mission drift or external capture of the protocol.
The Mandate describes the EF's main aim as enabling Ethereum to function as a decentralized and resilient "liberatory technology" that provides self-sovereign computation (where users have final control over their data, assets, and identities) and sovereignty-preserving coordination at scale.
The Foundation clarified that its role as the original — but not the only — steward of the Ethereum protocol is to enable coordination and preserve CROPS across the protocol layer and other key areas that it contributes to.
The EF added that its ultimate goal is for Ethereum to pass what its co-founder Vitalik Buterin has framed as "the walkway test," where "its protocol and core application layers become robust and trustless enough that they would continue to reliably function and evolve even if the Foundation and today's core developers disappeared tomorrow."
While pursuing this goal and carrying out its stewardship role, the Foundation noted that it remains an independent non-profit and will not pursue monetary rewards, organizational growth or overzealous adoption. "We support adoption insofar as it does not contravene our mandate," the EF wrote.
Meanwhile, EF President Aya Miyaguchi added that CROPS, as captured in the Mandate, should be a core priority for all members of the Foundation, noting that it serves beyond a mere manifesto.
"For me, it is also a kind of love letter to Ethereum, and to everyone who cares about what it truly makes possible: a digital world that remains open, private, and secure, and gives us a new form of freedom to grow into," Miyaguchi wrote in a Friday X post.
The release of the Mandate comes amid broader discussions about new roadmaps and the function of rollups in the Ethereum ecosystem.







