A repository for Ethereum research code and academic papers, primarily maintained by Vitalik Buterin.
Ethereum Research is a GitHub repository containing code implementations related to specific Ethereum research questions, primarily written by Vitalik Buterin. It serves as a collection of practical explorations and experiments in blockchain technology, along with LaTeX source files for academic papers. The repository focuses on sharing research artifacts rather than providing production tools or libraries.
Blockchain researchers, Ethereum developers, and academics interested in exploring implementation details of Ethereum-related research concepts and accessing source files for published papers.
Provides direct access to Vitalik Buterin's research code implementations and academic paper sources, offering unique insights into Ethereum research methodology and experimental approaches that aren't available in standard documentation.
This repository serves as a collection of code related to specific Ethereum research questions, primarily authored by Vitalik Buterin. It focuses on practical implementations and explorations rather than being a general repository for academic papers. The repository includes a dedicated papers folder containing LaTeX files for various academic publications.
The repository is maintained as-is without active support, focusing on sharing research implementations and academic paper sources rather than providing production-ready tools or ongoing maintenance.
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Provides unmediated access to implementation code written by Ethereum's co-founder, offering rare insights into his research methodology and experimental approaches.
Includes LaTeX files for published papers, enabling researchers to study formatting, citations, and raw content directly from the source.
Focuses on code for specific research questions, demonstrating real-world applications of theoretical blockchain concepts in an exploratory context.
MIT license allows free use, modification, and distribution, facilitating derivative works and experimentation without legal barriers.
The repository is explicitly maintained as-is without priority, meaning bugs may not be fixed and code could become outdated or incompatible with newer systems.
Lacks comprehensive explanations, tutorials, or context, making it challenging for those unfamiliar with the specific research topics to understand or use the code.
Code is intended for research exploration only; using it in applications requires significant modification, testing, and security audits, as noted in the README's as-is disclaimer.