Key takeaways
- Ethlabs was launched with five former Ethereum Foundation researchers to strengthen core infrastructure.
- Bitmine, Sharplink and Joe Lubin support Ethlabs as institutional adoption of Ethereum grows.
- Ethlabs will focus on AI scaling, interoperability, and commerce in the next phase of Ethereum.
Ethlabs forms independent research group to strengthen Ethereum’s core network
A group of senior Ethereum contributors launched Ethlabs, a nonprofit research and development organization created to prepare the network for a new wave of institutional and artificial intelligence (AI)-based activity.
The initiative is funded by a coalition led by Bitmine Immersion Technologies, Sharplink, Ethereum co-founder Joe Lubin, and other ecosystem backers including Anchorage, Octant, and SNZ.
Ethlabs is designed to reinforce Ethereum’s core principles of credible neutrality, resistance to censorship and security while helping the network evolve to stable coinsreal-world tokenized assets, funds, decentralized finance and autonomous AI commerce.
The organization was co-founded by five former Ethereum Foundation principal investigators: Ansgar Dietrichs, Barnabé Monnot, Caspar Schwarz-Schilling, Josh Rudolf, and Julian Ma. Their previous work covers finality, scaling, data availability, Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) and the economics of protocols.
A new research center for the main Ethereum builders
Ethlabs arrives as the Ethereum ecosystem evolves towards a more distributed development model. As the Ethereum Foundation shrinks its mandate, independent groups are taking on larger roles in protocol research and infrastructure development.
Ethlabs will first focus on areas important to on-chain institutions: faster settlement, stronger interoperability, mainnet capacity, native issuance, cross-chain movement, and research into the monetary properties of ETH.
Dietrichs, executive director of Ethlabs, said Ethereum had reached a pivotal milestone after a decade of uninterrupted operation. He said:
Ethereum is uniquely positioned to become the neutral foundation on which users, institutions and agents can transact and interact. Ethlabs was created to help Ethereum realize this potential.
Joe Lubin said Ethereum is entering a phase where multiple independent nodes can help scale and protect the network. He commented:
Ethlabs will be instrumental in preparing the network for the next big wave of adoption, from institutional finance to agent commerce, with the scale, security, interoperability and resilience that global institutions need.
Treasury companies take on a management role
The funding effort also reflects the growing influence of public Ethereum treasury companies.
Tom Lee, President of Bitmine, said that Ethereum is poised for significant adoption by institutions and AI agents. He said:
As a significant institutional participant in the Ethereum ecosystem, Bitmine is excited to contribute to Ethereum’s long-term growth and support the dedicated builders, researchers, and innovators who are helping shape its future.
Sharplink CEO Joseph Chalom called the launch an “institutional supercycle” for Ethereum. He said supporting researchers at the protocol level is one of the clearest ways ETH holders can support the long-term development of the network.
Ethlabs said its financing structure is designed to preserve its independence. Contributions will flow through an independent grant administrator responsible for selection, evaluation and disbursement. Funders will benefit from transparency through quarterly reporting and an annual audit, but will not control the research program. Final decisions on technical direction will rest with Ethlabs management.
For Ethereum, the launch marks another step in its maturation from a developer-led experience to a global settlement infrastructure. The question now is whether new research institutions like Ethlabs can help the network meet the scale, privacy, and reliability requirements of the next adoption cycle.


