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Vitalik Buterinが新たなスケーリング計画を発表:Ethereumの基礎層を強化するため

Vitalik Buterin reveals his bold new plan to fix Ethereum’s scaling problem

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結論

Ethereumのスケーリング問題を解決するための新しいプランが公表された。

要点

  • Vitalik Buterinは、数年間で多くのエコシステムのスケーリング戦略がレイヤー2ロールアップに集中した後、Ethereumの基盤層を強化することを再び注視していると述べた。
  • 短期的には、Ethereumはより容易なチェックプロセスでブロックを増加させることで throughput を向上させることが可能であるとButerinは述べている。また、ブロックの一部だけを同時に処理するアップグレードにより、コンピュータがブロック全体を一時的に処理することから解放される。
  • 一方で、ブロック構造を変更することで、ネットワークがより多くの12秒の処理窓を使用できるようにし、その結果としてエラーや不安定性のリスクを増大させないことが可能であるとButerinは述べている。
  • 最後に、トランザクション手数料(ガス)の計算方法についても再考が行われており、現在では全ての活動が同じように影響を受けているが、短期的なデータの長期的な影響に大きな違いがあることを指摘している。特定の活動(例えば新しいコンピュータのデプロイメント)はネットワークの長期的な安定性に大きな影響を与えるとButerinは述べている。
Vitalik ButerinEthereumスケーリング問題レイヤー2ロールアップガスblobsエラー不安定性トランザクション手数料ブロック構造12秒の処理窓

本文

The new post reflects Buterin’s renewed focus on scaling Ethereum’s base layer, after several years in which much of the ecosystem’s scaling strategy centered on layer-2 rollups. Feb 27, 2026, 4:32 p.m. Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has published a new blog post on X outlining his latest vision for scaling the blockchain, arguing the network can boost capacity in the near term while laying the groundwork for a longer-term shift to advanced cryptography and data-heavy “blobs” that would change how Ethereum is validated.The post reflects Buterin’s renewed focus on scaling Ethereum’s base layer, after several years in which much of the ecosystem’s scaling strategy centered on layer-2 rollups. The plan comes on the heels of the Ethereum Foundation publishing a ‘strawmap’ aimed at making the network more efficient in the long term.In the short term, Buterin says Ethereum can safely increase throughput by making blocks easier and faster to check. Upcoming upgrades will allow the computers that run Ethereum to review different parts of a block simultaneously, rather than processing everything step by step. At the same time, changes to how blocks are built will let the network use more of each 12-second processing window, rather than finishing early out of caution (known as ePBS, and will be implemented in the upcoming Glamsterdam upgrade).The result: Ethereum should be able to fit more transactions into each block without increasing the risk of errors or instability.Another major piece of the plan involves rethinking how transaction fees — known as “gas” — are calculated. Buterin argues that not all activity on Ethereum puts the same strain on the network. There’s a big difference between using computing power temporarily and permanently adding new data that every Ethereum computer, or node, must store forever.Right now, those costs are largely bundled together. But creating new permanent data — such as deploying a new contract — increases the blockchain’s long-term size, making it more expensive to run a node over time. That, in turn, risks pushing out smaller operators. Buterin’s proposal would make long-term storage more expensive while allowing more room for everyday transaction processing. In effect, Ethereum could handle more activity without dramatically increasing how fast the blockchain grows.The goal, he argues, is to avoid a future in which Ethereum processes more transactions but becomes so data-intensive that only large, well-funded players can afford to participate.Longer term, Buterin sees Ethereum leaning more heavily on zero-knowledge proofs (a private verification method) and expanded data capacity through so-called blobs. Originally introduced to help layer-2 networks post transaction data more cheaply, blobs could eventually carry Ethereum’s own transaction data — a shift that would allow validators to confirm activity without re-running every transaction themselves.Read more: Ethereum’s ‘Glamsterdam’ upgrade aims to fix MEV fairnessMore For YouFormer Mt. Gox CEO proposed a rewrite of bitcoin's code to recover $5 billion in stolen funds. Gets quickly shutdownMark Karpelès submitted a pull request to Bitcoin Core that would redirect coins that have remained untouched since 2011 to a recovery address controlled by the MtGox trustee, reigniting the oldest debate in Bitcoin.What to know: Mark Karpelès, the former Mt. Gox chief executive, has proposed a Bitcoin Core change that would let nearly 80,000 BTC taken from the exchange in 2011 be spent to a Mt. Gox recovery address.The patch, under 50 lines of code, would hard-code an exception so that signatures from a designated recovery key could override the current controller of the coins once activated at an agreed block height.Critics, including some Mt. Gox creditors, argue the proposal would set a dangerous precedent by altering Bitcoin’s consensus rules to reassign specific coins, risking politicization, hard-fork coordination problems and potential chain splits.Read full story

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