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Decentralized computing sovereignty is under siege, and this may be a consensus among many industry insiders. Ethereum co-founder Vitalik recently made a statement that drew attention — he believes 2026 will be a key year to "regain lost computing sovereignty," and this shift is certainly not limited to the blockchain space.
What exactly drives this judgment? Vitalik's answer is straightforward: over-reliance on centralized service platforms has become a hidden danger, and personal data sovereignty has become a luxury. Rather than just talking about it, he has chosen to take action. By 2025, Vitalik has almost completely migrated his work to the decentralized encrypted document platform Fileverse, and his communication tools have shifted from mainstream applications to Signal, which offers stronger privacy protection. He also plans to replace Google Maps with an open-source mapping solution by 2026.
From documents to communication and navigation, this complete decentralized toolchain signals that the future is not a choice but an inevitable trend. The replacement of infrastructure often begins with the practical validation by pioneers, and Vitalik's series of actions may be writing a new narrative for the entire Web3 ecosystem.
I've been using Signal for a while, and it’s definitely much more comfortable than those flashy apps.
Is the Google Maps alternative good enough? I'm not quite willing to abandon it completely.
Sovereignty sounds nice, but most people are probably too lazy to bother.
If decentralized toolchains can really become popular, that would be awesome.
Signal + Fileverse + open-source maps, truly practicing their beliefs, unlike some people who only talk but don't act.
True autonomy should be reclaimed step by step like this; otherwise, all data remains in others' hands, and there's no talk of sovereignty.
2026 is coming soon. Let's see how many people can be inspired to follow suit.
Signal should have been used a long time ago; that Google Maps setup definitely needs to be replaced.
Saying 2026 is the key year, I only half believe it... but this set of tools does have some substance.