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Vitalik Buterin proposes an Ethereum consensus mechanism optimization plan: replacing Casper FFG with Minimmit
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin recently outlined an important technical upgrade idea, proposing to replace the current finality component Casper FFG with a new mechanism called Minimmit. This proposal marks a further optimization attempt of Ethereum’s proof-of-stake (PoS) consensus mechanism, aiming to find a better balance between efficiency and security.
According to the latest data, ETH is currently priced at $2,160, with a 24-hour increase of +1.00%, and the market remains focused on innovations at the Ethereum protocol layer.
How Minimmit Simplifies Validator Signature Processes
The most notable design improvement of Minimmit lies in its efficiency for validators. Under the current Casper FFG mechanism, validators need to complete two rounds of signatures to achieve finality confirmation. In the Minimmit proposal by Vitalik Buterin, this process is significantly streamlined—validators only need to make one signature to confirm finality.
This “one-step” design allows the network to reach consensus faster, reduces the computational burden on validators, and improves overall network responsiveness. For a public chain with a high daily transaction volume, such efficiency gains could lead to substantial throughput improvements.
Trade-offs: Reduced Fault Tolerance
However, every optimization comes with costs. To achieve this simplification, Minimmit’s fault tolerance threshold will decrease from the current Casper FFG’s 33% to about 17%. This means that under the new mechanism, the network can only tolerate up to 17% of validators being faulty or malicious, which could compromise liveness and security.
Compared to the more than threefold reduction in tolerance, this appears to be a significant trade-off. But Vitalik Buterin believes this trade-off is worthwhile—key differences lie in how faults are handled when they occur.
Vitalik Buterin’s Security Argument
Vitalik Buterin’s core argument revolves around the severity of two types of fault scenarios. In Minimmit, when attacks or client errors occur, the system tends to favor “multi-chain fork competition” rather than falling into a “faulty finality” trap.
Simply put, if validators cannot reach finality on a single chain due to an error, different clients may temporarily diverge into multiple chains, but this state can be recovered through community coordination. In contrast, if the system has already finalized a problematic block, subsequent recovery costs are much higher, potentially requiring more aggressive on-chain governance interventions or hard forks.
From this perspective, “being temporarily unable to finalize” is indeed easier to handle than “finalizing a faulty block,” and aligns better with the principles of distributed coordination in blockchain.
The Significance of ETH’s Consensus Innovation in Layer 1 Competition
This proposal will directly impact Ethereum’s competitiveness among Layer 1 blockchains. Solana is known for high efficiency, while Avalanche, Polygon, and others have their own consensus innovations. If Minimmit can significantly improve finality speed while reducing fault tolerance, Ethereum could gain a new competitive edge in the core dimension of consensus mechanisms.
Of course, reducing fault tolerance from 33% to 17% requires thorough community discussion and validation. Vitalik Buterin’s proposal will undoubtedly stimulate deeper thinking about the trade-offs between consensus security and performance.