‘Ethereum Has Been Struggling Recently’ Polkadot Ambassador Max Rebol
In a one-on-one interview with The Crypto Times founder Hardik Katariya, Max Rebol, Founding Partner of Harbour Industrial Capital, was blunt about Ethereum’s situation. The VC who invests in Polkadot says that Ethereum’s focus on Layer 2 has created financial problems that are making the network less sustainable.
The Free Rider Problem on Ethereum
Rebol is most critical of Ethereum because of what he calls the “free rider problem.” He believes that Layer 2 solutions are using Ethereum’s security without giving enough back to the network.
According to Rebol, all these L2s on Ethereum are basically getting a free ride. In simple words they use the security of Ethereum’s crypto economy, but they do not pay the fees on the main chain. It’s not a business model that will last over time.
Due to this economic mismatch, Ethereum needs Layer 2 solutions to become more scalable, yet those solutions take away transactions from the main network and thus reduce Ethereum’s income. Besides this, Rebol also talked about the disagreements among leaders within the Ethereum organization.
The experienced investor points out that the recent bear market saw his Polkadot-focused fund achieve 3x returns, and now he believes that these economic pressures have led to noticeable disagreements among Ethereum’s leaders. Different leaders in the community often clashed, and Rebol thinks that issue is still ongoing. That is the main reason Ether has faced so many difficulties lately.
Rebol points out that Ethereum’s Layer 2 approach was mostly created as a quick fix rather than by careful design. According to him, Ethereum turned to L2s as a quick solution because the main chain was overloaded with transactions.
He pointed out that Ethereum’s approach to scaling was doomed from the start and has only caused more issues than it resolved. Rebol believes that Ethereum’s problems are not caused by short-term market changes, but by more serious issues that will be tough to fix unless the network’s economic model is changed.
How is Polkadot Better in this Case?
Rebol spotlighted Polkadot’s edge in blockchain scalability during the discussion. In a statement later obtained by The Crypto Times, he clarified that while he does not wish to criticize competing networks, it’s essential to highlight Polkadot’s innovative structure.
“Polkadot, on the other hand, has already solved this very issue since the beginning. Parachains are nothing else than an L2 (or rollup), that are design[ed] to pay their fair share and are natively interoperable,” he noted. Furthermore, Rebol argued that Polkadot’s architecture, which enables more agile block space allocation, presents a “much more sustainable paradigm than Ethereum’s current L1+L2 scaling attempt.”
