AI found an Ethereum bug that could take validators offline, but humans had to prove it

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11/07/2026, 20.00

The Ethereum Foundation pointed coordinated AI agents at the software its validators run and got a remotely triggerable crash out of it. It also got a pile of confident, well-written findings that were not bugs at all.

AI found an Ethereum bug that could take validators offline, but humans had to prove it

Developers at the Ethereum Foundation recently set AI agents loose on the software Ethereum runs on, hoping to discover bugs in an ongoing effort to keep strengthening the largest blockchain by value locked.

And while bugs were found, meticulous human judgment was still required to differentiate between what was real and what were false positives - with the Protocol Security team publishing field notes on tips the broader ecosystem should follow in their own AI workflows.

Ethereum runs on thousands of nodes, or ordinary computers running the network's software, each keeping a copy of the chain and passing messages to its neighbors.

Validators, the nodes that stake ether and vote on which blocks are valid, sit on top of that layer. They only work if messages reach them.

The bug these engineers found sat in gossipsub. The flaw let a remote system trigger a crash — wherein the node's software hits an impossible calculation, gives up and shuts itself down, taking a validator offline until an operator restarts it.

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