Vitalik Buterin Throws Weight Behind Maxwell’s Bitcoin Core Position - Ethereum Founder’s Surprising Endorsement
Ethereum creator Vitalik Buterin just dropped a bombshell endorsement that's sending shockwaves through crypto circles.
The Unlikely Alliance
When the mastermind behind the world's second-largest blockchain publicly backs Bitcoin Core advocates, you know something significant is brewing. Buterin's support for Maxwell's stance isn't just another tweet—it's a strategic move that could reshape blockchain governance debates.
Core Principles Collide
The Ethereum founder's alignment with Bitcoin maximalist positions reveals deeper philosophical shifts in the crypto landscape. This isn't about tribal loyalties—it's about fundamental protocol integrity versus rapid innovation. Traditional finance executives watching from their glass towers must be scratching their heads at this display of cross-chain intellectual honesty.
Protocols Over Profits
Buterin's endorsement cuts through the usual noise of token pumps and partnership announcements. It signals that even in 2025's mature crypto market, foundational debates about decentralization and security still drive the industry's brightest minds. Wall Street might measure success in quarterly earnings, but in crypto, we're still fighting battles over Satoshi's original vision.
Contributors work for themselves
Maxwell said, “The Bitcoin project isn’t going to meet would-be censors halfway simply because they were loud and obnoxious, or because they throw out legal threats or try to bring down adverse actions by governments.”
He said contributors work for themselves, they want a system they can trust, not a product for others. Many dislike non-fungible tokens (NFTs) or “shitcoins,” but they accept them as the cost of keeping the system open.
Greg Maxwell added that people who work on Bitcoin do it for themselves. Even if some are paid, it’s for the benefit of those paying, not to please users. As Maxwell put it, “Everyone is invited to share in the benefits, but no one should force you to work against your own interest.” Bitcoin has always faced criticism, and those who don’t like it simply don’t have to use it.
Community reaction
The comments sparked pushback online. One critic dismissed Maxwell’s argument, saying it doesn’t make sense to claim contributors aren’t also users of Bitcoin. But Buterin defended the point, suggesting that Maxwell’s perspective sees a good protocol as a kind of work of art, where the system’s design matters more than individual complaints.
The discussion shows the ongoing tension in the Bitcoin community between sticking to strict technical rules and reacting to social pressures, a debate that has been around since the network started.
Also Read: Elon Musk Praises Bitcoin’s Energy-Backed Economic Model

