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Melody

06/23 10:01

Who pays for Ethereum Foundation funding? Community asks

The Ethereum Foundation’s wider ecosystem push has triggered fresh debate over funding, accountability and communication. 






Summary






Ethereum Foundation-linked ecosystem groups drew backlash as users questioned funding sources during weak ETH performance.



Ethlabs gained Joe Lubin support and five former Foundation researchers this week publicly.



Funding transparency, budgets and accountability now sit at the center of Ethereum’s governance debate.








The discussion follows attention on groups such as Ethlabs, EthAppsGuild and Argot, which form part of a broader move to spread Ethereum research, tooling and adoption work across more independent organizations.



“Who is paying for all of this?” became the central question from parts of the community after the new groups drew attention. The concern is not only whether Ethereum should fund public goods. It also centers on how budgets, grants and large supporters are explained when ETH is trading weakly.




Who's paying for all this?— vladechad 🐯 (@vladechad) June 22, 2026













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Market weakness raises pressure



ETH has struggled through a difficult stretch in 2026, with rallies failing to turn into a clear recovery. Weak price action has made ecosystem spending more sensitive because investors are watching costs, value capture and competition from rival networks.



Ethereum leaders should focus more on ETH demand, Layer-2 economics and clearer value return to the base chain. Supporters of continued funding say research and developer work cannot pause during weak markets, since core infrastructure still needs maintenance and upgrades.



“As longtime contributors to the core protocol, we are establishing an independent non-profit organization to advance Ethereum’s core technology and the shared standards and infrastructure builders depend on,” Ethlabs executive director Ansgar Dietrichs said.



crypto.news reported that Ethlabs launched with support from Joe Lubin, Bitmine, Sharplink, Anchorage, Octant, SNZ and other Ethereum ecosystem participants. The group includes five former Ethereum Foundation researchers and will focus on settlement speed, network capacity, native asset issuance, cross-chain interoperability and Ethereum’s monetary design.



Ethlabs did not disclose how much funding it received. The group said an external grants administrator will handle contributions, while supporters will receive quarterly reporting and annual independent audits. It also said contributors will not control research priorities, technical roadmaps or organizational decisions.



Argot describes itself as an independent nonprofit research and development group that sustains Ethereum’s core programming languages and tooling, including Solidity. Its role places it close to the developer base that many applications and smart contracts still depend on.



Transparency becomes the main issue



The Ethereum Foundation’s Ecosystem Support Program also plays a long-running funding role. The program says it supports builder tools, infrastructure, research, community resources and other public goods. Its website lists $44.4 million across 677 projects in 2024, after $61.1 million across 498 projects in 2023.



That history explains why the community often links new Ethereum groups to broader ecosystem funding, even when groups are legally separate. Public material does not show one single funding channel for every organization mentioned in the debate, which leaves room for questions about donors, budgets and long-term plans.



The backlash comes during a wider debate over Ethereum’s funding structure. Former Ethereum Foundation researcher Dankrad Feist has proposed a new $1 billion organization for Ethereum, while other contributors have warned that core development funding could face pressure if existing support models shrink.



For now, the dispute is not only about spending. It is also about trust in how Ethereum explains its funding choices. Clearer budget disclosures, donor rules and progress reports may help reduce confusion as independent groups take a larger role in Ethereum’s future work.












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