Vitalik Buterin, Ethereum OGs to Create a $220M Security Fund from TheDAO

Updated 6 minutes ago by · 3 mins read

Ethereum’s early supporters are repurposing $220 million in idle funds from the infamous 2016 DAO hack to establish a comprehensive security fund for the network.

Long-term Ethereum supporters, known as “OGs” are transforming remnants of the network’s most famous crisis into a major security boost. This refers to $220 million of locked funds from TheDAO hack from 2016 and a recent movement from Vitalik Buterin together with other Ethereum OGs to build a security fund with that idle money.

Laura Shin broke the story in an exclusive Unchained report published on Jan. 29. Griff Green, a curator from the original DAO and member of the White Hat rescue group, is leading the effort alongside other early contributors and Vitalik Buterin, according to Shin.

The funds come from two untouched pools left after the 2016 hack recovery. One of them is the ExtraBalance contract with 70,500 ETH and the curator multisig holding assets worth $13.5 million. At current prices, the 70,500 ETH are worth more than $200 million.

Most of the Ethereum ETH $2 795 24h volatility: 7.0% Market cap: $337.27 B Vol. 24h: $35.57 B —69,420 ETH—will be staked to create a sustainable income stream, while the rest supports immediate grants. Distribution will use quadratic funding, retroactive awards, and ranked-choice voting to stay true to DAO roots.

The Ethereum Foundation will define eligibility for each round, with operational help from Green’s organization Giveth. Supported work includes auditors like Trail of Bits and OpenZeppelin, incident response teams like SEAL 911, research platforms such as L2Beat, and user tools including Revoke.cash and Blockaid.

Notably, Green told Unchained the untouched funds have grown significantly over the decade. He sees the timing as right to direct them toward making Ethereum more secure. The move also seeks to rekindle DAO development, which Green described as at a low point amid regulatory hurdles and paused projects.

“It’s 2026 and we never touched any of those funds. They’ve appreciated substantially. And so it’s time. It’s time to put them to work to make Ethereum safer and more secure,” Griff Green told Laura Shin.

The 2016 DAO Hack and Its Lasting Impact

The original DAO raised over $150 million in 2016 but suffered a major exploit that drained millions in ETH. At that time, the community hard fork returned most of the funds but split the chain, birthing Ethereum Classic—an event Coinspeaker covered at the time.

Nearly ten years later, recent Ethereum upgrades continue prioritizing security and resilience. Coinspeaker reported on Jan. 12, 2026, on Vitalik Buterin’s comments about the network passing a “walkway test” for long-term independence.

Developers are also advancing the Hegota upgrade to improve censorship resistance. Buterin has also been advocating for better, not bigger DAO governance designs—aligning with this fund’s community-focused approach.

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