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    Home » Ethereum Foundation publishes formal mandate to hard‑lock censorship resistance and privacy
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    Ethereum Foundation publishes formal mandate to hard‑lock censorship resistance and privacy

    James WilsonBy James WilsonMarch 16, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    The Ethereum Foundation’s new “EF Mandate” formalizes its role as steward of a censorship‑resistant, privacy‑first, open‑source base layer, signaling zero appetite for surveillance‑chain compromises.

    Summary

    • The EF Mandate codifies the Foundation’s job as protecting Ethereum as a neutral, permissionless settlement layer, not a product chasing KPIs or short‑term metrics.
    • It centers a CROPS‑style stack — censorship resistance, open‑source, privacy, security and UX — and ties that to concrete work like FOCIL, PSE and post‑quantum research.
    • For builders, the document is a filter: EF capital and support will flow to open, trust‑minimized, privacy‑preserving systems, not to chains with compliance hard‑coded into L1.

    The Ethereum Foundation has moved from vibes to written doctrine, publishing an “EF Mandate” that spells out how it intends to keep Ethereum censorship‑resistant, open‑source and privacy‑first as the protocol scales.

    Today, the Foundation’s Board released the EF Mandate.

    This document, which was first intended for EF members, reaffirms the promise of Ethereum, and the role of EF within this ecosystem.

    — Ethereum Foundation (@ethereumfndn) March 13, 2026

    EF Mandate puts values in writing

    In the new “EF Mandate,” the Ethereum Foundation Board lays out a formal statement of its role in the ecosystem, framing the document as part charter, part declaration and part guidance for the wider community. The mandate commits EF to safeguarding Ethereum as a neutral, permissionless base layer and explicitly centers a CROPS‑style value stack: censorship resistance, open‑source development, privacy, security and better user experience. The idea is simple and ruthless: Ethereum either functions as sovereignty infrastructure, or it degenerates into a surveillance chain masked as innovation.

    The EF stresses that it will focus on long‑term, unglamorous work that others in the ecosystem will not or cannot do — from protocol hardening and privacy research to developer tooling and public‑goods funding. It positions itself not as a product company chasing KPIs, but as a steward of the base layer whose main job is to protect the network’s integrity and resilience.

    Censorship resistance and privacy front and center

    The mandate fits into a broader EF arc over the past two years: tightening its cypherpunk orientation, restructuring teams and doubling down on privacy and anti‑censorship guarantees at L1. EF‑backed initiatives such as the Privacy Stewards (PSE), the Institutional Privacy Task Force and a new post‑quantum research team all aim at the same target: making Ethereum robust enough to be a global settlement layer without turning into a perfect tool for mass financial surveillance.

    On censorship resistance, the Mandate echoes ongoing work like FOCIL (Fork Choice with Inclusion Lists), which is designed to ensure that, as long as a slice of validators stays honest, user transactions get included even if some block producers bow to regulatory pressure. On privacy, EF thinking has shifted from “nice‑to‑have” app‑level features to stack‑wide guarantees, including network‑level protections and better tooling so users do not leak metadata every time they touch the chain.

    Political signal to regulators and builders

    This is not just internal housekeeping. By fixing censorship resistance, privacy and user sovereignty in writing, EF is sending a clear signal to regulators and institutional partners that it will not redesign Ethereum’s base layer around global KYC, surveillance or built‑in backdoors. Instead, it is betting on general‑purpose privacy infrastructure with selective disclosure on top — view keys, compliance add‑ons at the edge — while leaving the core protocol neutral.

    For builders, the Mandate is a line in the sand: if your protocol depends on centralized choke points, opaque code or compliance baked into the chain, do not expect EF support. If you are pushing towards open‑source, permissionless, trust‑minimized systems that actually protect users, the Mandate says the Foundation is structurally on your side — and is reorganizing its roadmap, funding and governance to match.





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