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Friday Dec 5 2025 08:40
3 min
Shortly after the Fusaka network upgrade, the Ethereum network experienced a notable decline in validator participation due to a bug within the Prysm consensus client. This flaw effectively knocked a portion of votes offline. According to an announcement released by Prysm, version v7.0.0 of their client was inadvertently generating outdated states while processing old attestations. Core developer Terence Tsao explained that this malfunction prevented nodes from operating correctly. As a temporary solution, users were advised to launch the client with the “--disable-last-epoch-targets” flag.
Data from Beaconcha.in indicates that at epoch 411,448, the network achieved only 75% sync participation (representing the percentage of 512 randomly selected nodes signing chain heads) and 74.7% voting participation. The 25% decrease in voting participation fell just 9% short of the threshold required for the network to lose the two-thirds supermajority necessary to maintain finality and regular operation.
As of the current Ethereum network epoch (411,712), voting participation has recovered to nearly 99%, with sync participation reaching 97%. This suggests that the network has successfully recovered from the incident. Prior to the issue, epochs routinely demonstrated vote participation well above 99%.
The decline in vote participation closely mirrors the proportion of validators utilizing the Prysm consensus client, estimated at 22.71% on Wednesday before decreasing to 18% following the incident. This data suggests that the attestation failure was primarily concentrated among Prysm validators.
If voting participation dips below two-thirds of the total staked Ether (ETH), the Ethereum network loses finality. While block production can still occur in such scenarios under Ethereum's design, the chain is no longer considered finalized.
A likely consequence of such a disruption would be the freezing of layer-2 bridges, pausing of rollup withdrawals, and increased block confirmation requirements by exchanges due to a heightened risk of chain reorganization.
The potential for an incident leading to Ethereum losing finality is not merely theoretical. In early May 2023, the Ethereum mainnet experienced a loss of finality, occurring twice within a 24-hour period due to bugs in the handling of old-target attestations within the Prysm and Teku consensus clients.
This incident could have had far more severe repercussions, considering Prysm was estimated by its developers to run on over two-thirds of consensus nodes back in September 2021. Data shared in January 2022 by Michael Sproul, a developer contributing to Lighthouse, the current majority consensus client, showed that Prysm was operating on 68.1% of nodes.
While Ethereum consensus client diversity has seen improvements since 2022, it remains short of achieving a client count below 33%. This threshold is crucial to ensure that a bug in a single client is insufficient to halt network finality. Current data from MigaLabs indicates that Lighthouse alone accounts for 52.55% of consensus nodes, with Prysm holding the second position at 18%.
This represents a decline compared to the pre-incident figures, where Lighthouse held below 48.5% and Prysm stood around 22.71%, according to MigaLabs. Ethereum educator Anthony Sassano noted on X that “if Lighthouse had had the bug instead, then the network would’ve lost finalization.”
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