Editorial
About solanacbdc.com — Mission & Editorial Standards
solanacbdc.com is a focused reference site on digital state money and the rails it runs on: what CBDCs are, where every major country program actually stands, and how the institutional money stack on Solana — stablecoins, tokenized deposits, real-world assets — intersects with the central-bank world.
It is deliberately small. Around two dozen maintained pages, written and updated by Daniel Voss, beat a thousand auto-generated posts — and this domain knows that firsthand: it previously hosted exactly that kind of low-value content under prior ownership, and the current site is a ground-up rebuild with the opposite philosophy.
Editorial standards
- Primary sources only for factual claims. BIS, IMF, the ECB and national central banks, Congress.gov and EUR-Lex for legislation, exchange/on-chain data for market figures. We cite the institution, not the blog that paraphrased it.
- Dated verification. Status pages (the CBDC tracker and country pages) carry a “Last verified” date, and that date means a human re-checked the page against sources — pages are re-verified on a quarterly cycle and after major events.
- No sponsored content, no affiliate placements, no token promotion. Nothing on this site is financial advice, and no project — including Solana — pays for coverage. Where Solana has weaknesses relevant to the topic (network outage history, validator-governance questions), we say so in plain text.
- Hype symmetry. Central-bank optimism and crypto-industry optimism get the same discount rate.
Why “Solana CBDC”?
Because the most interesting question in digital money sits exactly at that intersection: no central bank issues on a public chain today, yet state-supervised dollars already clear on Solana at hundreds of billions per month through regulated private issuers. The honest version of that story — neither “SOL will host the digital dollar” nor “CBDCs are irrelevant” — is what we cover, starting with could a CBDC run on Solana?