I validatori di Ethereum affrontano una nuova proposta per reindirizzare fino al 10% dei premi di staking
A new Ethereum Research proposal has revived one of the network’s most sensitive debates: who should pay for the public goods, research and infrastructure that the Ethereum ecosystem depends on? TL;DR A new Ethereum Research post proposes “validator redirected revenue.” The mechanism would let validators signal a redirect rate from 0% to 10% of staking rewards. If majority support emerged for a non-zero rate, the contribution could become mandatory under the proposal. The idea is early-stage and has not become an EIP or scheduled protocol change. The proposal, published on the Ethereum Research forum, outlines a mechanism that would allow validators to redirect part of their staking rewards toward ecosystem funding. The redirect rate would range from 0% to 10%, and validators would signal their preferred rate. CoinDesk reported that the proposal is being framed as a way to address Ethereum’s public-goods funding problem. The idea is simple enough on the surface. Ethereum benefits from shared work: client development, security research, tooling, grants, education and maintenance that no single app or validator necessarily wants to fund alone. The proposal tries to create a protocol-level path for that funding without relying entirely on donations, foundations or application-layer fees. Why The Proposal Is Controversial The controversy starts with the word “mandatory.” Under the model described in the research post, validators could initially signal voluntarily. But if a majority supported a redirect rate above zero, that contribution could apply across the validator set. That is where the debate quickly moves from public-goods funding into governance, validator power and user expectations. For stakers, any redirect from staking rewards is effectively a reduction in yield . That may be acceptable if the community sees the funding as improving Ethereum’s long-term resilience, but it also raises questions about whether validators should be able to impose that cost on delegators or smaller operators. There is also a centralisation concern. If large staking providers dominate signaling, they could shape where funds flow and how much of the network’s rewards are redirected. Ethereum has already spent years worrying about staking concentration, liquid staking dominance and governance capture. A new rewards mechanism would have to avoid making those issues worse. Early Research, Not A Scheduled Upgrade The most important caveat is that this is not an imminent Ethereum hard fork. It is a research-forum proposal. It has not been accepted as a final roadmap item, implemented in client software or scheduled for activation. That still does not make it irrelevant. Ethereum’s economics have been under pressure as layer-2 activity has moved some fee revenue away from the base chain, while core infrastructure remains expensive to maintain. Proposals like this show that the community is still searching for a sustainable funding model. For ETH holders, the setup mat