AEREDIUM Proposes New Architecture for Financial Neutrality Post-SWIFT Challenges
Albert Dadon's AEREDIUM project seeks to redefine financial network neutrality by moving enforcement to hardware enclaves. This shift aims to shield financial systems from geopolitical pressures, addressing vulnerabilities exposed by the SWIFT sanctions on Russia.

AEREDIUM's approach focuses on transitioning financial governance from traditional boardroom settings to secure data centers, mitigating risks associated with centralized legal entities. The SWIFT sanctions against Russian institutions highlighted the fragility of perceived neutrality in financial rails, prompting a search for alternatives like CIPS and stablecoin corridors.
However, these alternatives face questions of long-term neutrality. Dadon argues that decentralized governance alone does not protect against jurisdictional pressures and that credible neutrality requires architectural solutions.
With the integration of TradFi and Web3 presenting security challenges, AEREDIUM's model emphasizes automated governance and structured selective disclosure to maintain privacy while ensuring compliance. This new architecture could transform how financial institutions operate across jurisdictions, reducing their vulnerability to conflicting regulations.




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