How long can the Ethereum ecosystem survive after the launch of Mythos?
Recorder · Preface
After Alan finished talking about Mythos, the crowd moved outside. When I went to get my coat, I heard someone in the hallway calmly say, "What you just talked about, what does it mean for Ethereum?" I stopped and found the source of the voice. It was Marcus, leaning against the wall, holding a half-finished cup of water. Alan turned his head and was silent for about three seconds.
I stood a little farther away, taking notes on everything I could hear. This was the most honest conversation about the security risks of Ethereum I had ever witnessed. Not because they used vocabulary I hadn't heard before, but because they clearly articulated one thing by putting together what had already happened and the trends that were unfolding: the security boundary we thought existed may no longer be there in the face of Mythos.
The First Thing: $68 Billion, Code Fully Public, Permanently Unmodifiable
Marcus did not immediately answer Alan's question. He took out his phone from his pocket, opened DefiLlama, and handed the screen to Alan.
$68 billion, that was the amount locked on the Ethereum chain that day.
The Second Thing: Where Will Mythos Strike First—Specific Predictions
Alan said that while walking back this afternoon, he kept thinking about one question: if an attacker with Mythos capabilities faced Ethereum today, what would their priority order be?
He said he wanted to say it out loud because he felt the defenders should think this through first.
"The attacker's priorities are clear: find contracts with a lot of money, old code, and no one guarding them. Mythos compresses the months needed for humans to complete this filtering into just a few hours."
The Third Thing: Lido Controls 28% of Staked ETH—This is Another Vulnerability
"stETH is the oxygen of Ethereum DeFi. You don't need to burn down the whole city; you just need to make the oxygen briefly disappear for two minutes at the most critical moment."
The Fourth Thing: Audited Equals Not Audited in Front of Mythos
These types of cross-contract semantic vulnerabilities are the source of the largest attacks in history. Audits are usually limited to single contracts; Mythos analyzes the entire call graph.
"An audit is a photo taken in 2021. The operating environment of the contract in 2026 is no longer the same as the scene in that photo. Mythos is looking at today's reality, not that photo."
The Fifth Thing: Governance is a Moat, but Also the Slowest Leg
Alan asked Marcus: If tomorrow Mythos discovers a serious vulnerability in Aave that could jeopardize billions of dollars, how quickly can the Ethereum ecosystem respond effectively?
Marcus paused for a few seconds:
"Decentralization disperses the decision-making response to everyone. When AI compresses the attack preparation time to zero, 'everyone deciding together' becomes the slowest leg."
The Sixth Thing: How Long Can Ethereum Survive
Only the two of them and I were left in the hallway. A cleaner was pushing a cart from a distance. Marcus spoke first:
"How long Ethereum can survive is equal to how urgently its community treats this matter. The technical answer has already been given by Mythos. The human answer has not yet been." They shook hands and walked in different directions. I stood in the hallway, flipping through my densely packed notes on my phone. Ethereum: $68 billion, code fully public, contracts unmodifiable, 28% of staked ETH concentrated in one protocol, governance response takes days. Mythos: the time to analyze a contract may be shorter than it takes me to finish this page of notes. I don't know when the first truly AI-driven, Ethereum-scale security incident will occur. I only know that Alan's statement is correct: in the history of blockchain, there have been too many conversations about "what should have been done earlier," and each time it was after something happened. I hope this time is different.
Palo Alto · April 2026
TVL data source: DefiLlama real-time data (April 2026)
Vulnerability statistics source: OWASP Smart Contract Top 10 2026, coinlaw.io 2026 security report, arxiv 2504.05968
The dialogue is organized from on-site notes, Marcus L. is a pseudonym
Alan Walker doesn't use question marks.
Original link
You may also like

Morning News | CME Group launches Nasdaq Cryptocurrency Index futures; Asset management giant Janus Henderson strategically invests in Ethena

Bitcoin Layer 2 Network Botanix: Why Did We Choose to Dissolve?

Why did Oracle deliver the strongest financial report in history, yet its stock price fell?

When the P2P illicit funds from ten years ago turned into 60,000 bitcoins

Dialogue with OmenX Founder: Why does the prediction market need an evolution from "spot" to "derivatives"?

Galaxy in-depth report: Is Solana still worth paying attention to?

Young people in South Korea make a "final effort" in the epic bull market

The pricing controversy of Trade.xyz exposes the fatal weakness of Pre-IPO perpetual contracts

How much longer can Ethereum's last big buyer hold on?

World Cup 2026 Coming – WEEX Celebrates with $1M Prize Pool & Michael Owen Live

Morning Report | OpenAI has submitted an S-1 registration statement draft to the U.S. SEC; Morpho completes $175 million financing

Galaxy Deep Research Report: How Hyperliquid's HIP-4 Upgrade Changes the Landscape of Prediction Markets?

Latest research from 13 top universities including Cornell University: The current state, challenges, and misconceptions of the fusion of Crypto and AI

Deconstructing Anthropic: The Best AI Company, Possibly Also a Type of Organizational Invention

Every exchange is a "Universal Exchange."

The counterattack of traditional finance: Alliance chains are quietly reviving

Pantera Capital Partner: How Tokenization is Restructuring the Private Equity and Early Investment Ecosystem?

Mastercard Launches Agent Pay for AI, Plans to Record AI Agent Payment Authorizations on Polygon
Mastercard launched Agent Pay for AI, a new payment protocol designed to help AI agents make small payments such as pay-per-use access to data and APIs. The system plans to record human-granted AI agent permissions on Polygon, focusing on verifiable authorization, identity, and payment controls.
