We’re likely to witness the appearance of the new digital reality of the institutional financial world. The “network of networks” is steadily combating the pain points of modern crypto exchanges, such as regulatory scrutiny, security issues, and lack of interoperability. So, start reading and don’t say you weren’t warned!
Building a decentralized exchange (DEX) seems simple: smart contracts manage trades, users retain control over their assets, and the system operates without intermediaries. In reality, things are much more complex.
The Canton Network – a new player on the field, but it’s not just another blockchain. It's a "network of networks" designed from the ground up to fix institutional gridlock. It’s built on one core promise: letting different, private systems connect and transact with each other without sacrificing privacy or control.
Canton Network appeared just over two years ago and has already been used on Wall Street to finance treasuries with digital dollars. That’s the kind of adoption every new technology dreams of. What’s the secret behind its success?
Trends in the crypto space move at lightning speed. One moment it's ICOs, and then, before you could catch your breath, NFTs became the main event. When a DAT term arouses, a healthy dose of skepticism is natural. Is this something with staying power, or just another fleeting obsession?
Web2 has reached its limits. Centralized platforms still dominate how we shop, play, and communicate online, but they come with well-known flaws: lack of ownership, data privacy risks, and high intermediary costs. Web3 came to change that.
McKinsey & Company has underlined that procurement is “no longer a back-office function focused solely on cost reduction; instead, it has become a critical component of business strategy, helping organisations manage risk, drive innovation and build resilience.”
Ever had one of those brilliant ideas? That spark in the middle of the night, the kind of thing you just know is special. Now, picture it getting swiped. Copied and plastered all over the internet before you’ve even had a moment to call it yours.