A group of former Ethereum Foundation researchers has launched Ethlabs, an independent nonprofit research and development organization backed by BitMine, SharpLink and Ethereum co-founder Joe Lubin. The new lab is designed to give senior Ethereum protocol contributors a stable, independent home as the network prepares for larger-scale institutional, DeFi and AI-linked adoption.
Ethlabs was co-founded by Ansgar Dietrichs, Barnabé Monnot, Caspar Schwarz-Schilling, Josh Rudolf and Julian Ma. The group includes researchers who have worked on some of Ethereum’s most important technical areas, including finality, scaling, data availability, virtual machine design and protocol economics.
The funding group includes BitMine Immersion Technologies, SharpLink, Lubin and other Ethereum ecosystem participants, including Anchorage, Octant and SNZ. Ethlabs said its funders will not control the organization’s technical roadmap, an important point for a project operating inside an ecosystem that places high value on credible neutrality and open development.
The launch comes during a period of major change for Ethereum’s research structure. The Ethereum Foundation has been narrowing its role and rethinking how protocol development should be funded, while outside capital has increasingly flowed into Ethereum treasury companies, infrastructure firms and independent research teams.
Ethereum research moves beyond the foundation
Ethlabs reflects a broader shift in Ethereum’s development model. For much of Ethereum’s history, the Ethereum Foundation was the central home for core protocol research. That role remains important, but the ecosystem is becoming more distributed as independent labs, companies and treasury firms begin funding protocol-level work directly.
The timing is notable. Ethereum is preparing for a future in which stablecoins, tokenized assets, decentralized finance, institutional settlement and AI agents place far greater demand on the network. That requires continued work on scalability, security, user experience, transaction costs and economic design.
Ethlabs’ founders have deep experience in those areas. Dietrichs, Monnot, Schwarz-Schilling, Rudolf and Ma have been associated with research covering Ethereum consensus, validator incentives, scaling and other foundational systems. By moving into an independent nonprofit, the group can continue protocol work without being fully dependent on the Ethereum Foundation’s internal budgeting and governance.
That could make Ethereum’s research pipeline more resilient. Multiple independent teams can reduce reliance on one institution, diversify funding and allow protocol contributors to specialize. However, it also raises coordination questions. Ethereum upgrades require broad consensus among researchers, client teams, validators, application developers and the wider community. More independent research groups can strengthen the ecosystem, but only if coordination remains strong.
Institutional backers signal strategic interest
The backers behind Ethlabs also show how Ethereum treasury companies are becoming more active ecosystem stewards. BitMine and SharpLink have both positioned themselves around large ETH treasury strategies, while Lubin, through Consensys and SharpLink, has been one of Ethereum’s most influential long-term advocates.
Their support for Ethlabs suggests that public-market ETH holders increasingly see protocol development as directly linked to asset value. If Ethereum becomes the settlement layer for stablecoins, tokenized securities, DeFi and AI-based financial activity, companies holding large ETH treasuries benefit from stronger network fundamentals.
That creates a new model of ecosystem funding. Instead of relying only on foundations or venture-backed startups, Ethereum protocol work may increasingly receive support from corporate treasury holders whose balance sheets are tied to ETH’s long-term success.
The structure also carries reputational risks. Ethereum’s value proposition depends on neutrality, censorship resistance and resistance to capture by powerful actors. Ethlabs will need to show that its technical agenda remains independent even while receiving funding from large ETH-aligned companies and influential ecosystem figures.
For Ethereum, the launch is still a positive signal. It shows that senior researchers can leave the foundation without leaving protocol development, and that the ecosystem can create new institutions to retain technical talent.
The broader implication is that Ethereum’s institutional phase will require more than capital inflows and treasury accumulation. It will require sustained research, careful governance and credible public infrastructure. Ethlabs is being positioned as one of the organizations that can help provide that foundation.
