Canton Network CEO Hits Back at ‘Crypto Ideologues’ Over Blockchain Purity Debate

A Clash in Crypto: Ideals vs. Reality

In the fast-growing world of blockchain and crypto, a big debate is heating up. On one side, hardcore fans push for total openness and no central control. On the other, builders like Yuval Rooz focus on what big banks and firms really need. Rooz recently fired back at critics he calls ‘crypto ideologues’ for questioning if Canton is a true blockchain.

This fight shows a key split in crypto. Will the future be wild and free like early Bitcoin dreams? Or will it bend to fit giant institutions moving trillions? Let’s dive into Rooz’s bold words, Canton’s rise, and why this matters for blockchain’s next phase.

Who is Yuval Rooz and What is Canton Network?

Yuval Rooz, 45, leads Digital Asset, the company behind Canton Network. He started the firm in 2014 after years as a trader and analyst at Wall Street giants like Citadel and DRW. For over a decade, his mission has been clear: bring blockchains to traditional finance.

Canton launched in 2024 as a blockchain built for institutions. It claims to handle $350 billion in daily on-chain assets—huge compared to Ethereum’s $1.3 billion daily DEX volume. While that number isn’t verified by outsiders, Canton’s quick growth draws eyes from banks and payment firms.

‘The point of blockchains is not to get rid of intermediaries. The point is to reduce the competitive barrier that exists in today’s traditional world.’

Rooz says blockchains should make finance fairer and faster, not kill off middlemen. That’s a big shift from crypto’s roots.

The Heat from ‘Crypto Ideologues’

At EthCC in Cannes, Rooz called out his critics. He points out that Ethereum layer-2 networks like Base and Arbitrum use central sequencers that can censor users. Yet they get little flak.

  • Base can block transactions easily.
  • Arbitrum has similar powers.
  • Canton gets slammed for being less open.

‘Why Canton is getting a lot of the noise? It’s a compliment,’ Rooz said. The backlash proves Canton’s threat to old-school crypto views.

Critics hit Canton on key points:

  1. Not fully immutable: Canton lets users remove old data to meet EU privacy rules. True blockchains usually lock data forever.
  2. Permissioned access: Only approved ‘Super Validators’—mostly banks—run the network. No public mining like Ethereum.
  3. Token issues: Early joiners grabbed lots of CC tokens, now worth billions. This feels unfair to newcomers.
  4. Opacity: No public view of real activity. Is that $350B figure real repo market trades or just reports?

Wall Street vet Austin Campbell questions: ‘If Canton vanished tomorrow, would there be any impact to the repo market?’ He sees it as a data feed, not core infrastructure.

Rooz’s Strong Defense: Real-World Needs First

Rooz doesn’t dodge the critiques. He argues the world isn’t permissionless, especially for real-world assets (RWAs) like bonds, real estate, and treasuries.

‘The world is not permissionless. Even if we wanted it to be permissionless, it’s just not.’

RWAs need KYC checks, regulations, and trust between parties. Canton builds for that. Rooz sees crypto ideologues mixing up crypto tokens with RWAs.

He praises Ethereum’s openness but doubts its mass adoption for trillions. ‘If you run $20 trillion worth of assets, you can’t just trust decentralized governance.’

To win enterprises, Canton made compromises—like privacy features and vetted validators. This speeds up use by big players scared of wild crypto risks.

Canton’s Big Wins and Partnerships

Despite the noise, Canton moves fast:

  • DTCC: Tokenizing assets with the market infrastructure leader.
  • J.P. Morgan: Issuing JPM Coin via Kinexys on Canton.
  • Visa and Circle: Joined as Super Validators.

These ties show institutions betting big. DRW, Rooz’s old firm, backs Canton deeply—but denies paying partners to join.

Canton’s CC token hit $5.5 billion market cap post-launch. Early validators profited huge, sparking envy but proving early faith pays off.

The Bigger Picture: Permissionless vs. Permissioned Blockchains

This debate echoes crypto’s evolution. Bitcoin aimed to ditch banks; now BlackRock sells it in ETFs. Ethereum sticks to cypherpunk roots—no central kill switches.

Yet institutions flood in. Stripe and Paradigm’s Tempo joins the race with custom chains. Tokenized RWAs could hit trillions, but most will be permissioned.

Feature Ethereum Canton Network
Open Access Anyone with ETH Approved institutions
Immutability Forever Deletable for compliance
Daily Volume $1.3B DEX $350B claimed (unverified)
Target Users DeFi users Banks, enterprises

Permissionless chains shine for DeFi and NFTs. Permissioned ones unlock finance’s core—trillions in assets waiting to tokenize.

What’s Next for Blockchain?

Rooz’s view wins ground as regs greenlight crypto in the US. Institutions want speed and safety, not revolution.

But purists warn: Lose decentralization, lose what makes blockchain special. Ethereum Foundation doubles down: ‘Without openness, we have nothing.’

The hybrid path may prevail—open chains for retail, tailored ones for pros. Canton proves pragmatism pulls capital. Watch RWAs: They could dwarf crypto natives.

As Rooz says, blockchains lower walls, not smash them. bets this pragmatic push will redefine finance. Crypto ideologues disagree—but the trillions will decide.

Will permissioned blockchains dominate? Share your take in comments.


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