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Vitalik Buterin outlines three near-term moves to bring native privacy to Ethereum

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Ethereum’s co-founder, Vitalik Buterin, has revealed three technical initiatives that are already underway to move the network toward built-in transaction privacy. 

With growing demand for privacy and quantum resistance, Vitalik has presented his own proposals for how the network can deliver on what some individuals argue could lead to higher network fees and maximize relevance. 

What is Ethereum doing to add native privacy? 

In a post on X, Vitalik Buterin, Ethereum co-founder, named three live technical efforts to solve the problem of transaction privacy. 

  • Account abstraction paired with FOCIL (a forced inclusion list mechanism)
  • A new proposal called keyed nonces
  • Access-layer work, including a project called Kohaku and private read capabilities. 

FOCIL (Fork-Choice Enforced Inclusion Lists) makes it harder for anyone to block private transactions. Keyed nonces change how the Ethereum network counts and orders transactions. And the access-layer changes are aimed at preventing data leakage when wallets check the blockchain.

The keyed nonces effort already has a formal specification. EIP-8250 replaces Ethereum’s single sender nonce with a two-part system. This gives frame transactions independent replay domains. The new system prevents observers from linking transactions that originate from the same account but belong to different contexts. 

The proposal aims to support up to 500 billion privacy-related records over eight years without damaging decentralization. Vitalik argued that storing these 500 billion “nullifiers” is actually easier for the network than storing regular data, because nullifiers have a simple structure that allows for sharding and bloom filters. That keeps Ethereum decentralized even at a massive scale.

Aside from the replay problem, privacy protocols like Privacy Pools and Railgun currently depend on external relayers to broadcast transactions on a user’s behalf, adding cost and a single point of failure. 

Account abstraction lets these protocols verify signatures natively, while FOCIL’s inclusion lists make it harder for block builders to censor the resulting transactions. Combined, the two eliminate the relay dependency that has kept privacy tools expensive and fragile to maintain.

In April 2025, Buterin posted a nine-step roadmap that includes changes like migrating wallets to a one-address-per-application model, replacing trusted execution environments with cryptographic private information retrieval for RPC calls, and building proof aggregation so multiple privacy transactions can share a single on-chain proof.

On the same day as Buterin’s update, crypto analyst MilliΞ argued on X that native privacy is “the type of feature that can give an asset true ‘moneyness’ qualities” and predicted that layer-1 privacy could drive higher mainnet transaction fees. 

Ethereum is juggling privacy with quantum resistance 

Ethereum’s privacy upgrades are linked to its other defensive priorities. The Ethereum Foundation has announced that it is preparing quantum-resistant cryptography across four areas: consensus signatures, data availability commitments, account signatures, and application-layer zero-knowledge proofs. 

These areas overlap directly with Buterin’s privacy roadmap. Account abstraction, for instance, is an important part of both efforts. EIP-8141, which could arrive in the Hegotá hard fork in the second half of 2026, would let individual accounts adopt quantum-safe signature schemes without waiting for the whole network to change. 

Cryptopolitan has previously reported on how privacy and quantum preparedness often advance in tandem, since both depend on upgrading the same cryptographic primitives. The Ethereum Foundation formed a dedicated post-quantum security team in January 2026 and is aiming to complete the core infrastructure by approximately 2029.

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