Vitalik said hours-long delays caused by major bugs remain acceptable as long as the blockchain processes transactions without finalizing wrong information
Ethereum News
Temporary loss of finalization poses no serious threat to Ethereum's network security, according to co-founder Vitalik Buterin, who addressed concerns following a recent Prysm client bug. The blockchain continues to function normally during finality delays, with the critical priority being avoidance of finalizing incorrect blocks rather than preventing occasional confirmation slowdowns.
Oxford University computer science PhD and 20squares partner Fabrizio Romano Genovese supported this position, noting Ethereum resembles Bitcoin when finality is lost. Bitcoin has operated without finality since 2009, he pointed out, with users accepting its probabilistic rather than deterministic confirmation model.
A comparable incident occurred in May 2023 with circumstances similar to the recent Prysm client issue. Genovese emphasized these events don't compromise chain security but temporarily shift reorganization protections from deterministic to probabilistic, matching Bitcoin's long-standing operational model.
Infrastructure dependent on finality faces impacts during these periods, particularly inter-blockchain and layer-2 bridges. Polygon representatives confirmed normal operations would continue but transfers from Ethereum might experience delays while awaiting finality restoration.
The AggLayer crosschain settlement layer would postpone transactions from Ethereum to L2 networks until finality returned. However, users face no risk of rollbacks or message invalidation—deposits simply take longer to appear without exposing participants to reorg-driven reversions beyond timing delays, according to Polygon's statement.
Genovese attributed bridge delays to developer choices rather than protocol limitations, noting bridge builders who implement no fallback mechanisms for finality loss make that decision independently. The Ethereum protocol itself maintains security and transaction processing regardless of temporary confirmation delays.
