REDATOR Ben Graham Postado 15 horas atrás REDATOR Denunciar Share Postado 15 horas atrás All public chains are by default “decentralized,” but the level of decentralization varies. How decentralized a chain like Ethereum, Bitcoin, or Solana always remains a topic of discussion. Nearly all debates center on node distribution but fewer on how wallets connect and “talk” with the underlying mainnet. This is about to change. Starting with Ethereum, which hosts some of the best cryptos to buy, it will soon be possible for wallets to talk directly with the mainnet without relying on third parties. An important, and perenially underrated, aspect of "trustlessness", "passing the walkaway test" and "self-sovereignty" is protocol simplicity. Even if a protocol is super decentralized with hundreds of thousands of nodes, and it has 49% byzantine fault tolerance, and nodes fully… pic.twitter.com/kvzkg11M3c — vitalik.eth (@VitalikButerin) January 18, 2026 According to Vitalik Buterin, one of the six co-founders of Ethereum, developers will soon phase out so‑called “trust me” wallets by 2026. Following this comment, the Ethereum price didn’t shift higher. Instead, sellers are still in control, but the second most valuable coin is soaking in selling pressure, maintaining ETH USDT above $3,100. Market Cap 24h 7d 30d 1y All Time DISCOVER: Best Meme Coin ICOs to Invest in 2026 What are Ethereum “trust me” wallets? Unless otherwise, most technical upgrades on Ethereum won’t move prices by large margins. However, for every update, the network becomes more performant, cheaper, secure, and decentralized. Based on Buterin’s comment, it is clear that the first smart contract network is trying to fix the hidden trust assumptions most users never agreed to. As it stands, “trust me” wallets like MetaMask offer a smooth user experience but rely on hidden centralized middlemen to function. When you open a wallet like MetaMask to check your balance or send a transaction, the wallet doesn’t usually talk to the blockchain directly. Instead, it asks a centralized RPC provider, like Infura or Alchemy, to fetch the data. In this way, you are essentially trusting that the server is telling you the truth about your balance and that it isn’t logging your IP address or selling your transaction metadata. This reliance on centralized “cloud” servers is a problem, though Vitalik said “decentralized” app developers had no choice now that Ethereum was growing at a faster pace. And there have been instances when these centralized servers wreaked havoc whenever they failed. Multiple Infura outages and the massive Cloudflare/AWS-driven “front-end darkouts” that followed served as a massive wake-up call for the Ethereum ecosystem. If Infura goes down, MetaMask effectively “goes blind” because it has no other way to talk to the blockchain. Ethereum RPC provider @infura_io is having an outage. Services that rely on their RPC might be experiencing issues. This would include dApps, indexers, bridges, and any other infrastructure that relies on the Infura RPC. Always good to have a backup RPC or run your own.… pic.twitter.com/sFYC5aEFAd — bretep (@bretep) November 26, 2024 DISCOVER: The 12+ Hottest Crypto Presales to Buy Right Now The Solution: 2026 Roadmap The Ethereum 2026 roadmap aims to make local verification the standard for all wallets, removing the need to trust an external server. To eliminate single points of failure, Ethereum will focus on the use of Helios light clients. These are “tiny” nodes that runs inside your browser or phone. They sync in seconds and allow any connected wallet to verify data cryptographically rather than just “asking” a server. Wallets will use Helios, or similar light clients, embedded directly in the app. Helios doesn’t care which RPC provider it talks to. It can pull raw data from Infura, Alchemy, a random community node, or a decentralized provider. Because the wallet verifies the data itself using cryptographic proofs, it doesn’t matter if the source is untrusted or unstable. If one provider fails, the wallet automatically switches to another without the user even noticing. we don’t need Zcash it adds unnecessary fragmentation. we need privacy tools on a public, uncensorable chain. Ethereum makes it easy for wallets to integrate privacy tools like RAILGUN, with Kohaku & L2s like Aztec are bringing private smart contracts to the Ethereum network pic.twitter.com/e5a1NXvj2Q — rip.eth (@ripeth) January 6, 2026 Additionally, Ethereum is looking at Kohaku SDK. Simply put, this is a new Ethereum Foundation-backed development kit that helps wallet makers build privacy and local verification into their apps by default. On top of this, the use of Private Information Retrieval and Oblivious RAM will allow a wallet to fetch data from a server without the server knowing which account or transaction you are looking at, boosting privacy. DISCOVER: 9+ Best High-Risk, High-Reward Crypto to Buy in 2026 DISCOVER: 16+ New and Upcoming Binance Listings in 2026 99Bitcoins’ Q4 2025 State of Crypto Market Report Follow 99Bitcoins on X For the Latest Market Updates and Subscribe on YouTube For Daily Expert Market Analysis. The post Ethereum Targets ‘Trust Me’ Wallets: Here’s What Changes in 2026 appeared first on 99Bitcoins. Perfeito! Obrigado! Amei! Haha Confuso :/ Vixi! Wow! Gostei! × 💬 Gostou do conteúdo? Sua avaliação é muito importante! Gostei! Perfeito! Obrigado! Amei! Haha Confuso :/ Vixi! Wow! 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