Every decentralized system begins with the vision of returning power to its users. As convenience and efficiency become the main drivers in system design, trust gradually returns to the system. From custodial nodes to whitelisted relays, these seemingly benign features inadvertently create new centers of authority.

(Source: Vitalik Buterin)
In his “Trustless Manifesto,” Vitalik Buterin asserts that real trustlessness isn’t just a feature—it’s the foundation of blockchain. If a protocol depends on any trusted intermediary, the appearance of neutrality is superficial. Only trust systems built on mathematics, consensus mechanisms, and open protocols can ensure Web3 doesn’t repeat Web2’s centralization cycle.
Vitalik Buterin reaffirms Ethereum’s core purpose: it wasn’t created to make finance more efficient or apps more sophisticated, but to empower humans to collaborate freely—without permission and without trust.
Ethereum stands out because it replaces trust with verification and policies with protocols. This approach is more than a technical decision; it represents a clash of values. People should base freedom on individual sovereignty and the right to verification, not on the goodwill of intermediaries.
True trustless systems don’t reject trust—they make trust verifiable. Vitalik Buterin and his team laid out five principles for Trust Minimization:
Ignoring these principles leads decentralized protocols down the same path as centralized platforms.
Vitalik Buterin points out that the biggest threat to trustlessness isn’t malicious attacks—it’s quiet compromise. Today, most dApps default to centralized RPC nodes;
Every convenience-driven concession returns trust to the system’s core; every time verification is skipped, it weakens the defense. Ultimately, blockchain risks falling back under the control of trusted intermediaries, which is what it was created to disrupt.
Vitalik Buterin stresses that developers’ responsibility isn’t to make systems easier to use, but to make them freer. If systems sacrifice verifiability for user-friendliness, or let convenience outweigh neutrality, that’s not progress—it’s regression. He sets out three core design rules for developers:
These rules may make development tougher, but this rigor is what preserves the true essence of trustlessness.
Ethereum’s scaling is now a reality, and the next challenge is to maintain honesty. As Layer 2 solutions, cross-chain bridges, and modular architectures emerge, remember:
Trust minimization isn’t about zero risk—it’s about making errors visible, fixable, and accountable. Real trustlessness means mistakes aren’t hidden.
If you want to learn more about Web3, please register at: https://www.gate.com/
Web3’s mission is not just to decentralize technology, but to remove intermediaries from power and trust. Trustlessness isn’t a fleeting revolution—it’s a long-term resistance. By choosing openness over control and transparency over blind trust, we keep the spirit of Ethereum alive: freedom, censorship resistance, and verifiable trust.





