- Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson says Genesis ADA was profit earned from early work.
- He rejects calls to use those funds for new integrations or community needs.
- Treasury, not Genesis ADA, should finance current ecosystem initiatives.
Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson has moved to clarify one of the blockchain’s longest-running disputes, reaffirming that the platform’s early Genesis ADA allocations were private earnings for foundational work and risk and not community-owned funds waiting to be spent.
Hoskinson’s remarks came during a November 30 livestream titled “Genesis ADA,” where he called the matter “closed” and warned against rewriting the project’s original terms.
Calls to redirect Genesis ADA toward integrations
Hoskinson said renewed calls to redirect Genesis ADA toward recent integrations misrepresent how the project was structured from the beginning.
He explained that the allocation given to Input Output (IO) and EMURGO followed a straightforward premise: these were profits tied to early risk, not contributions to a public treasury.
At the time of the Japanese crowd sale that funded Cardano, IO’s portion was worth around $8 million.
Hoskinson emphasised that this funding model was understood by all parties involved, stating that early contributors accepted deep regulatory, technical, and financial risk at a stage when failure was far more likely than success.
He noted that most cryptocurrency ventures collapse, yet Cardano not only survived but grew into a network valued in the tens of billions.
From that perspective, the Cardano founder argued that the founding entities’ profits were earned rather than taken from any community allocation.
He criticised what he called a “Twitter mob” mentality that surfaced whenever Genesis ADA reentered public debate.
He said the claim that early contributors do not deserve their allocation ignores the enormity of the risk they assumed and the substantial ecosystem they helped build.
He pointed to the initial capital provided by Japanese buyers and stressed that those early stakeholders have long been “made whole” under the terms originally agreed upon.
Why the issue reemerged
The latest wave of concern stems from a joint request for 70 million ADA from the on-chain treasury to fund integrations with major providers, including oracle networks and stablecoin issuers.
Some community members argued that Genesis ADA should cover those costs.
But Hoskinson dismissed the idea, noting that many of today’s integration partners did not exist when Genesis ADA was allocated, making the expectation retroactive and unreasonable.
He added that the requested treasury funds would not cover all expenses, and entities such as IO and the Midnight Foundation would contribute additional support because they hold significant positions in ADA and KNIGHT.
For the founder, the real debate is not about Genesis ADA but about how the ecosystem should evolve as Cardano prepares for a major strategic reset in 2026.
Shift toward a new Cardano governance layer
Hoskinson described this upcoming shift as a move from the original tripartite structure, IO, EMURGO, and the Cardano Foundation, to a more coordinated five-member executive layer.
The expanded group would include the Midnight Foundation and Intersect.
According to Hoskinson, this structure is needed to face a competitive landscape dominated by large and aggressive industry players, where a unified strategy is essential for securing key deals.
He also rejected the suggestion that IO or EMURGO should act as public utilities with balance sheets open for community direction.
As private companies, he said, their financial operations are not subject to community oversight.
Their commitment is limited to the work they promise and deliver.
Hoskinson ended the livestream by urging the community to move forward. He said the outcome of Genesis ADA is settled and cannot be revisited.
The task now, he said, is to decide whether the ecosystem should adopt the proposed 2026 framework and invest in the infrastructure needed for Cardano’s next phase of growth.