Ethereum Foundation unveils interoperability layer to unify fragmented L2 ecosystem

Source Cryptopolitan

The Ethereum Foundation (EF) has announced a newly proposed framework named the Ethereum Interop Layer (EIL), and it is aimed at addressing the seemingly never-ending fragmentation that has become a headache for the Ethereum L2 ecosystem in the search for throughput and affordability. 

There is little doubt that the Ethereum network has scaled; however, users still struggle with issues like fragmented liquidity, too many bridges, chain-specific wallets, and stressful cross-chain interactions. The EIL is the EF’s solution to those issues.

The EF wants Ethereum to feel like one chain again 

According to the official blog post from the EF, the Ethereum Interop Layer (EIL) is here to make Ethereum “feel like one chain again” while preserving trust-minimized, decentralized foundations, factors that the industry still cares about.

The EF has acknowledged that L2s chains have brought dramatic gains where throughput and cost-efficiency are concerned; however, it says there is no denying that they’ve also introduced a new kind of complexity for users and wallets. Complexities that have caused friction, cognitive overhead, and often exposure to additional trust assumptions — bridges, relayers, solvers — along with increased censorship risk.

The EIL will supposedly be a uniting beacon for all of Ethereum’s rollups, making them feel like a single, unified chain by making sure users only need to sign once for a cross-chain transaction without adding new trust assumptions. 

It is being led by the ERC-4337 team and built on the ERC-4337 account abstraction as well as the principles of the Trustless Manifesto, which means the users themselves will be the ones to initiate and settle cross-L2 actions directly from their wallets, bypassing relayers or solvers. 

The EF believes the EIL is a way to preserve Ethereum’s core guarantees, which include self-custody, censorship resistance, disintermediation, and verifiable on-chain execution. 

“This new account-based interoperability layer unifies Ethereum’s fragmented L2 ecosystem under Ethereum’s own security model,” the EF stated. 

In the official blog post, the EF even compared the EIL to HTTP, claiming it is to the ETH chain what HTTP was to the early Internet.

“Before HTTP, users could connect to individual servers — but not seamlessly combine them in one flow,” the blog reads. “HTTP unified the experience, letting browsers traverse servers effortlessly. EIL aims to do the same for Ethereum’s rollups: bringing Ethereum into its “web era”, where wallets act like browsers and users navigate freely across L2s without friction.”

What this means for the existing intermediaries 

While the EIL plans to unite L2s, it has no plans to alter their individual underlying architecture. Instead, it is to act as some sort of universal remote or adapter that enhances composability across them. 

The proposal has generated a positive buzz on X among community members who have been warming up to the idea of less bridging, which often costs money and outsources security; however, one fact bears mentioning: the EIL is being touted as a solution to some problems created by platforms that also emerged out of the woodwork to solve some issues. 

If the EIL is completely embraced and integrated, it would eliminate the need for the existing intermediaries like relayers and solvers, as it shifts control directly into the hands of the users and their smart wallets. When this happens, projects that have built a reputation on solving or relaying for L2 transactions may find 80 to 90% of their volumes drying up as users opt for cheaper wallet ops that are also now native thanks to the EIL. 

This will leave the intermediaries no choice but to adapt, evolve, or go extinct as the industry will now operate largely with transactions flying over their respective heads. For now, the proposal is still just a theory, but it has received a warm welcome and is on track to become a reality despite some of the highlighted challenges. 

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