According to a recent LinkedIn post from StarkWare Industries, the company is emphasizing privacy and cryptographic durability as core requirements for institutional adoption of blockchain. The post suggests that large institutions are unlikely to deploy significant capital on public ledgers where positions, counterparties, and treasury movements are fully visible in real time.
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The LinkedIn commentary also highlights long-term risks from evolving cryptography, particularly in the context of quantum computing and protocol migrations. It argues that blockchains which can upgrade cryptography at the account level, rather than through disruptive chain-wide changes, may be better positioned to attract “serious money” over the next decade.
StarkWare’s post frames “future-proof execution” as the strategic thesis behind Starknet, positioning it as infrastructure designed for both privacy and cryptographic agility. For investors, this could indicate a focus on capturing institutional flows that prioritize compliance-compatible privacy and operational resilience over headline transaction speed or low fees.
The post further references external developments, including NIST post-quantum timelines and migrations by Apple and Cloudflare, as signals that the broader technology stack is already moving toward post-quantum readiness. If Starknet’s architecture can align with these shifts and meet regulatory expectations, StarkWare may strengthen its competitive stance in institutional-grade blockchain infrastructure and potentially influence valuation assumptions around long-term defensibility and adoption.

