The wealth of possible combinations that modularity creates is certainly a major step forward. Is it akin to the difficulty of building an early website compared to the ease and customization of Squarespace today?
But then the tradeoffs
Despite the growth in DA projects, many have reservations about outsourcing DA. Vitalik made his clear : “Your data layer must be your security layer.” Dankrad Feist, another member of Ethereum Foundation, concurs : “If it doesn’t use Ethereum for data availability, it’s not an (Ethereum rollup) and therefore not an Ethereum L2.”
We agree. Rollups with outsourced data availability will be less secure than those using the same chain for data and consensus (and really should be referenced as “validiums”), although secure enough for certain applications. Short-term projects using such rollups will emerge and fade quickly, making it a good experimentation and testing ground. However, for long-term holding of financial assets, L1s such as Ethereum or rollups using them both for data and consensus will remain the networks with the lowest risk profile.
Ethereum is going modular
While skeptical about outsourced data availability, Ethereum is big on modular architecture. The early vision of scaling via sharding was abandoned in favor of modular.
The three main updates needed to implement the vision are rollups ( we talked about these before ), proposer-builder separation (“instead of a block proposer generating a ‘revenue-maximizing’ block by itself, it delegates the task to a market of outside actors (builders)”), and data sampling . The latter is a way for light nodes to verify that a block was published by only downloading a few randomly selected pieces of data. This is technically more challenging than the other two and will require two to three years to ship.
Important note: EIP-4844 was the first step in improving Ethereum’s data availability layer before data sampling goes live. As discussed earlier, enhancing Ethereum is similar to building the plane whilst flying; once the Ethereum Foundation recognized the need for rollups ( aka when Vitalik dropped the famous rollup-centric future ), the team opted to extend blocks with blobs (a dedicated space tailored specifically for rollup data). Blobs are expected to reduce the cost of rollup transactions up to 10 fold. EIP-4844 is scheduled to go live with the Dencun upgrade in March/April. While this is a temporary solution to keep Ethereum competitive for two to three years, the long-term solution will be supporting validity proofs on mainnet itself, which will make rollups orders of magnitude cheaper.
While Solana might be strongly defending its philosophy of monolithic architecture (and they might prove right for many use cases), the industry seems to be converging on modularity. In the case of Ethereum, only modular architecture will enable a future where:
1. Transactions are cheap for millions of users thanks to rollups (scalability);
2. The network is protected from censorship and threats like 51% attacks (security); and
3. An average PC or even a mobile can run a node to verify transactions (decentralization).
One might ask if Ethereum’s modular architecture solves the blockchain trilemma that was supposed to be unsolvable? Technically it doesn’t, because Ethereum is not a monolithic network anymore, but as a modular network, it does.
Of these three, we think decentralization is the most important part of the trilemma to solve. Innovation will eventually drive down transaction costs; prioritizing decentralization (especially geographic) is the only way to ensure long-term security for the network. Ethereum is leading in decentralization by having the most distributed validator set, with more than 800,000 validators . At the same time, with the modular approach, it can adapt to new design innovations through customized rollups that launch on top. Celestia and others certainly share this vision. The question remaining is whether Ethereum can move in this modular direction fast enough to keep up with the competition, which is building from scratch, and not fixing the plane whilst flying.
Odds & Ends
Uniswap Foundation proposes fee switch for token holders in governance Link
Superstate launches on-chain, regulated fund tracking TBills Link
DEX aggregator Jupiter airdrops $700m to Solana users Link
Synthetix 2024 roadmap Link
Dirt Roads writer launchs M^0, “money middlware for the digital age” Link
CoW DAO releases MEV-capturing AMM Link
Lending protocol Morpho sees huge growth Link
a16z invests $100m in EigenLayer Link
Thoughts & Prognostications
That’s it! Feedback appreciated. Just hit reply. I’m in Denver next week, get in touch if you’re around.
Dose of DeFi is written by Chris Powers , with help from Denis Suslov and Financial Content Lab . I spend most of my time contributing to Powerhouse , an ecosystem actor for MakerDAO . All content is for informational purposes and is not intended as investment advice.