Key Highlights
- The Project Odin aims to help key open-source teams plan for long-term funding.
- Vyper is the first pilot project in the initiative, showing how teams can combine technical work with sustainable funding.
- The project guides teams on funding diversification, using grants, contracts, and other sources to reduce financial risk.
The Ethereum Foundation has launched Project Odin, a new program designed to support critical projects in its ecosystem and ensure long-term stability.
According to the network’s blog post, the project is expected to target teams that provide key services, like Ethereum clients and core tools, which are widely used but often struggle with steady funding.
The initiative aims to help these teams plan for the future while reducing reliance on a single funding source. Each team in the program gets a strategic advisor who is going to guide them over a year and help them move from understanding their options to testing plans and putting them into action.
Helping teams plan for the future
The program was created in response to a common problem: many teams excel at technical work but struggle with funding, planning, or running an organization. They often depend on a single grant or donation, which can disappear quickly, putting the project at risk.
Libp2p, a key networking library used by multiple Ethereum clients and other blockchain tools, is one example of infrastructure that relies on teams facing these challenges.
Project Odin is designed to give teams hands-on support from the start, helping them plan carefully instead of waiting until money runs low. According to the foundation, “Odin is meant to be hands-on, iterative, and grounded in delivery,” making sustainability part of the project from day one.
Vyper takes the lead
The first pilot project in Odin is Vyper, a Python-based smart contract language created by Vitalik Buterin in 2016. The project makes smart contracts easier to audit while staying efficient on the Ethereum blockchain.
According to the blog post, the project has grown with 231 contributors in the last nine years, including 75 releases and over 5,100 GitHub stars. In addition, it currently secures billions of dollars across multiple blockchains. Also, the team behind the project formed the Foundation for Verified Software to participate in Odin.
Treating funding as a safety net
Project Odin treats funding as a way to manage risk. The teams in the program will continue to get grants and donations, but will also be guided to explore other streams of income, such as support contracts, taking consultations, or service agreements.
The program has three phases:
- Mapping funding and sustainability options, where each team looks at all the ways they could get money to keep running.
- Validating the best choices with potential partners: Here, the teams test which options are realistic and suitable for their work.
- In the last phase, the teams will put their plans in action by using the chosen funding sources.
The success of the teams will be measured based on how strong they are and how they diversify their funding rather than planning alone.
In the long run, the Ethereum Foundation expects Odin to evolve into Frontier Research Contractor (FRC), which is an organization that is capable of advanced technical work supported by a mix of grants and contracts.
Also Read: Vitalik Buterin: Ethereum’s Next Upgrade Focuses on Blocks and Gas