Ethereum Developers Lock in May 7 for Pectra Upgrade
The decision to schedule Pectra was made just over a week after the upgrade went live on the Hoodi testnet without any hiccups.

What to know:
- Ethereum developers set May 7 as the target date for the long-awaited Pectra upgrade, beginning the countdown for the blockchain's biggest changes since March 2024.
- The decision to schedule Pectra was made during a call between Ethereum's core developers – just over a week after the upgrade went live on the Hoodi testnet without any hiccups.
Ethereum developers set May 7 as the target date for the long-awaited Pectra upgrade on Thursday, beginning the countdown for the blockchain's biggest changes since March 2024.
Pectra contains a series of improvements aimed at making Ethereum more user-friendly and efficient. One such improvement is adding "smart contract" capabilities to wallets, which can make them easier to use and recover.
The decision to schedule Pectra was made during a call between Ethereum's core developers — just over a week after the upgrade went live on the Hoodi testnet without any hiccups. Pectra's test on Hoodi was the third and final dry-run of the upgrade. Two earlier tests had bugs, which led the developers to delay the upgrade on Ethereum’s mainnet.
Pectra consists of 11 major code changes, or "Ethereum improvement proposals" (EIPs), that will be shipped all at once. Together, the features aim to improve the staking experience, introduce wallet features, and update the overall network.
One of the main Pectra changes that will benefit Ethereum validators is EIP-7251, which will increase the amount of ETH one can stake from 32 to 2,048. The change is meant to alleviate the experience for those staking across multiple validators, who can now set that up under one node instead of multiple.
Read more: Ethereum’s Final Pectra Test Goes Live on Hoodi Network
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Ethereum co-founder Joseph Lubin warns of the dangers of AI being controlled by a few big tech firms

In an interview with CoinDesk, the Ethereum co-founder spoke also about Ethereum’s evolution through MetaMask, stablecoins and tokenization, while downplaying quantum computing as a long-term, manageable issue.
Bilinmesi gerekenler:
- Joe Lubin told CoinDesk that AI and crypto are converging to power a machine-driven economy, while warning that centralized AI control could pose risks.
- He described Ethereum’s evolution through MetaMask, stablecoins and tokenization, while downplaying quantum computing as a long-term, manageable issue.











