The Ethereum Foundation unveiled Clear Signing, an open standard that makes transaction approvals human-readable. The release targets blind signing, a flaw the foundation said has fueled billions in user losses.
Built around ERC-7730, the framework lets wallets display plain-language descriptions of each transaction before users approve it. The Ethereum Foundation’s One Trillion Dollar Security Initiative will steward the underlying infrastructure as a credibly neutral host.
Why Blind Signing Has Become a Costly Default
In many crypto exploits, the final step is not a software bug but a user approving a transaction. The Foundation’s announcement framed that approval gap as the core problem. Even after phishing or infrastructure compromise begins a breach, the last action typically falls to the wallet holder. Clear Signing aims to make that defense hold.
Approvals today often appear in low-level machine code that requires technical expertise to interpret. Some users rely on a separate device to double-check transaction details when the application could be compromised. The foundation cited the Bybit incident among recent cases where signed transactions drained user wallets.
How Clear Signing Works
ERC-7730 introduces a shared format that turns transaction data into clear, human-readable descriptions. Instead of being stored on-chain, these descriptions are kept in a decentralized off-chain registry and distributed to wallets.
Another standard, ERC-8176, allows independent auditors to verify and cryptographically confirm that these descriptions are accurate. Based on these verifications, wallets can decide which sources they trust.
Because the system works off-chain, existing apps don’t need to change their smart contracts to support Clear Signing. The Ethereum Foundation says this approach fits into its broader plan to improve privacy and security across the network.
Wallet providers will ultimately choose which descriptor sources to display, relying on reputation and audit attestations.
Multi-Party Push as Institutions Expand Ethereum Exposure
Ledger originated ERC-7730. The working group now spans MetaMask, Trezor, Fireblocks, WalletConnect, Cyfrin, Sourcify, and Zama, alongside independent contributors. Rust and TypeScript libraries funded by the 1TS program are hosted on clearsigning.org.
The release lands as institutions expand their Ethereum footprint, including JPMorgan’s recent launch of JLTXX, a tokenized treasury product. Vitalik Buterin has previously flagged transaction transparency as a critical blind spot for the network’s next phase of adoption.
Developers said the project remains active. Contributors are expanding wallet compatibility, audit tooling, and adoption across decentralized applications. Whether issuers, custodians, and wallet vendors converge on shared descriptors will determine how quickly Clear Signing becomes the default across DeFi and institutional flows.
The post Ethereum Foundation Launches Clear Signing Standard to End Blind Wallet Approvals appeared first on BeInCrypto.
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