Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has compared Ethereum to Linux, describing it as an open-source foundation designed to power the future of Web3—much like Linux became the backbone of modern computing.
Buterin’s vision positions Ethereum as a universal, permissionless infrastructure where anyone can build decentralized applications without relying on intermediaries. Just as Linux enabled global access to software outside the control of big tech companies, Ethereum aims to do the same for finance, governance, and digital identity.
Ethereum as the Operating System of Web3
According to Buterin, Ethereum’s role is not to be a single application, but an open platform that developers can freely build on. Smart contracts and decentralized apps running on Ethereum are designed to scale to billions of users, reinforcing its ambition to become the operating system of Web3.
Layer 2 Growth Brings Both Innovation and Challenges
Ethereum’s ecosystem now includes over 127 Layer 2 networks, which help lower fees and improve scalability. While this explosion of Layer 2 solutions has boosted innovation, it has also raised concerns about fragmentation, interoperability, and shared liquidity.
Despite these concerns, many in the community see this modular structure as a strength. The freedom to experiment across multiple chains reflects Ethereum’s open-source philosophy and its evolution toward a multi-chain future.
The Bigger Vision
The comparison to Linux highlights Ethereum’s broader goal: to become the core infrastructure of a decentralized internet, governed by its community rather than centralized authorities. If successful, Ethereum could serve as the backbone of Web3—enabling open, borderless movement of value and identity without intermediaries.
Bottom line: Ethereum doesn’t aim to be just another blockchain. Vitalik Buterin sees it as the foundational layer of a decentralized digital world, much like Linux became the foundation of modern computing.
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