Ethereum Foundation Grapples with Wave of High-Profile Departures Amid Ongoing Organizational Shift
The Ethereum Foundation faces renewed scrutiny as researchers Carl Beek and Julian Ma join a series of exits, part of a deliberate transition toward a leaner, more decentralized role in the ecosystem. Details on impacts and context.
- Multiple senior departures announced in recent months, including Carl Beek after seven years and Julian Ma after four, adding to exits by figures like Barnabé Monnot, Tim Beiko, Trent Van Epps, and others.
- Tied to EF’s new Mandate published in March 2026, emphasizing reduced centrality, focus on public goods, and Ethereum’s long-term resilience independent of any single organization.
- Community debate intensifies on X regarding implications for protocol development and governance, though many view it as maturation rather than crisis.
The Ethereum Foundation is under renewed scrutiny following the departures of two prominent researchers, Carl Beek and Julian Ma, announced on May 18, 2026. These exits extend a broader wave of high-profile turnover at the nonprofit organization that has stewarded much of Ethereum’s development since its inception.
Beek, who contributed for approximately seven years, including work on the Beacon Chain and the transition to proof-of-stake, stated that his last working day will be May 29. He plans time with family before pursuing new engineering opportunities. Ma, involved in cryptoeconomics, protocol design, and scaling efforts such as FOCIL (EIP-7805) and cross-chain confirmations, reflected on his four years at the Foundation.
These announcements follow earlier 2026 departures and transitions, including those of Barnabé Monnot and Tim Beiko (key protocol coordinators), Trent Van Epps, Alex Stokes (who took a sabbatical), and prior leadership changes such as co-executive director Tomasz Stańczak stepping down. At least eight senior contributors have exited or stepped back in recent periods.
The turnover aligns with the Foundation’s March 2026 EF Mandate, a 38-page document framing its role as a neutral steward rather than central authority. The Mandate stresses principles like censorship resistance, open-source development, privacy, and security (CROPS), while aiming for Ethereum to pass the “walkaway test”—functioning effectively even without the Foundation’s direct involvement. It signals a shift toward subtraction and decentralization as the ecosystem matures.
Community reactions on X have been mixed. Some express concern over leadership stability and development velocity, while others interpret the changes as intentional restructuring consistent with Ethereum’s ethos of progressive decentralization.
Ethereum Foundation Exodus Grows
— BSCN (@BSCNews) May 19, 2026
Two more top Ethereum Foundation researchers have resigned, bringing recent high profile departures at the organization to at least eight.
Julian Ma and Carl Beek ended their four and seven year tenures on Monday.
The exits add to growing… pic.twitter.com/LN5tgprAeR
Ethereum Foundation departures keep stacking up… community definitely watching leadership stability closely.
— Fluxor.io (@fluxor_) May 19, 2026
The Foundation did not immediately comment on the latest exits. Ethereum’s core protocol development continues through distributed efforts, including client teams, the Protocol Guild (now independent), and broader community contributions.
This evolution occurs as Ethereum navigates technical upgrades and competitive pressures in a maturing market. While short-term uncertainty may arise, proponents argue such transitions strengthen long-term resilience by distributing influence more widely.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute advice of any kind. Readers should conduct their own research before making any decisions.
Latest Content
- Ethereum Foundation Grapples with Wave of High-Profile Departures Amid Ongoing Organizational Shift
- Bitcoin’s Breathless Rally Meets A Reality Check — Why Traders Should Respect The Pullback
- Bitcoin Slides Below $77,000 Amid Geopolitical and Macro Pressures as Strategy Deploys $2 Billion to Buy the Dip
- Weekly Snapshot – Regulatory Clarity Meets Market Dip
- Bitcoin Slides to $78,000 as Over $500 Million in Longs Get Liquidated
Related
- The Ultimate Crypto Exit Strategy: 10 Timeless Indicators to Lock in Bull Market Gains Most investors fail at exiting because they get caught in emotional traps, holding too long in hopes of even higher gains....
- Chaos Labs exits Aave following governance rift and V4 transition concerns Chaos Labs, a major risk management provider, has announced its departure from Aave, marking the third core contributor to exit the DeFi protocol in two months....
- Linux Foundation Launches x402 Foundation to Govern Coinbase’s Open AI Payments Protocol On April 2, 2026, the Linux Foundation announced the x402 Foundation, taking stewardship of Coinbase’s x402 protocol for embedding payments into web interactions. The neutral, open-source body—backed by Google, Stripe, Visa, Mastercard, Shopify, Cloudflare, Solana Foundation and others—targets seamless AI-agent...
- Ethereum Foundation Launches $1M Audit Subsidy Program to Cut Smart Contract Security Costs On April 14, 2026, the Ethereum Foundation unveiled a $1 million Audit Subsidy Program partnering with Areta and over 20 top audit firms including Nethermind and Chainlink Labs. The initiative subsidizes up to 30% of audit costs for Ethereum mainnet...





