Undeterred by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commissionâs lawsuit against Telegram, developers and investors in the companyâs blockchain project have formed a nonprofit for community governance.
One of the TON Community Foundationâs first actions was to defend Telegram in the case, filing a friend of the court brief Friday in the U.S. District Court of the Southern District of New York.Â
The brief claims the âcommunity has about 2,000 active participants,â and âthe TON Blockchain is fully operational and could be launched on a 5-second notice.â The reason it hasnât is because the SECâs lawsuit against Telegram, brought in October, halted the launch of the blockchain, though not the projectâs development.Â
The brief takes aim at the expert report of Brown University professor Maurice Herlihy, earlier submitted by the SEC, which evaluated TON as lacking critical components for a successful launch and not sufficiently secure. The foundation argues that all the elements Herlihy found lacking in TON are not necessary for a launch.
The group was started by Fedor Skuratov, communications manager at TON Labs, the startup formed by TON investors building tools for developers. The foundationâs website went live Thursday night.Â
The list of participants so far includes 22 people representing their companies, among them TON Labs itself, broker Da Vinci Capital, wallet apps Atomic Wallet and Button Wallet, local communities of investors and developers TON China and TON France, and a number of tech startups. Telegram itself is not listed.Â
Since October, Telegram has been fighting the SECâs allegation it had been selling unregistered securities and arguing itâs been building a decentralized system, like bitcoin and ethereum.Â
The foundation will attempt to make this idea a reality, the groupâs declaration says. âOur main mission is to enable the fastest and the most effective development of TON as a decentralized system through collaboration and cooperation.âÂ
The foundation, helmed by an elected Governing Council, will coordinate the developers, validators, stakers and other members of the community to promote the usage of TON via education, research and development, grants and lobbying, the declaration says.Â
âI love this project but I always found it a bit centralized at this stage. So when I was given the opportunity to contribute in its decentralization, I was in!â said Philippe Rodriguez, head of the TON France community.Â
Sergey Prilutsky, head of the tech startup MixBytes and one of the founding members, told CoinDesk his company had âmany ideasâ about how to use TON, which seemed âpromisingâ as a blockchain. Therefore, MixBytes wants to have a say in how the future blockchain will be developed.Â
âAs developers, we need to know what standards, norms, security criteria, tools and documents will be adopted and take part in the decision making process,â Prilutsky said.Â
âWeâve been in the ethereum community for a few years and we believe such associations are crucial at the early stages of such projectsâ lives, which is the first ten years,â said Nick Kozlov, co-founder and CTO of Button Wallet.Â
To be clear, the foundation spearheaded by TON Labs has almost nothing to do with the TON Foundation described in the original TON white paper.Â
In fact, the concept described in the white paper might never be created by Telegram as it was supposed to manage the supply of the native gram tokens. This became a dangerous area for the company as itâs trying to convince the court itâs building a decentralized system, and therefore its native token, gram, is not a security.Â
According to the white paper, after the TON blockchain is launched and the investors get their allocations, every subsequent token should be sold by an entity named TON Reserve, which, in turn, would be controlled by the TON Foundation.Â
The TON Foundation was also expected âto provide most of the validators during the first deployment phase of the TON Blockchainâ, decide on protocol changes, and have a majority of votes during the first months of TONâs existence.Â
âLater, when less than half of all grams remain under control of the TON Foundation, the system will become more democratic,â the white paper said.
Then, apparently, the court battle made the need for âdemocratizationâ more urgent.Â
In January, Telegram issued a âpublic noticeâ saying it was âunder no obligationâ to establish the TON Foundation. The notice also said the wallet for grams will not be built into Telegramâs flagship product, the popular messenger app, at least not at the moment of the launch.Â
The wallet app for the testnet, which has been live since last March, was released in November. Earlier in February, Telegram published a technical paper describing the TON consensus protocol, dubbed Catchain.
Although nothing in the new foundationâs declaration mentions the SECâs lawsuit, the community apparently wants to help TON progress even if Telegramâs hands are tied.Â
Being more community driven will help the project succeed, said Sergey Vasylchuk, the CEO of tech startup Everstake, which is a validator in networks such as EOS and TezosÂ
âWe wouldnât like to see this project [become] a lawyerâs hostage. We saw that happening to Block.One, which has a great team and implementation but its hands are tied by the legal issues,â Vasylchuk said.
Skuratov acknowledged the timing of the foundationâs launch was set by the court timeline. The first hearing on the case is scheduled for Feb. 19.Â
But âthe community has already reached the point when itâs time,â he said.Â
On Feb. 18, the SEC asked the court to bar the TON Community Foundation from submitting its brief, calling the nonprofitâs claims âunsworn, unattributed and unverified.â
The agency also said that some participants in the foundation have an interest in the litigationâs outcome. Specifically, âone of the owners of TON Labs, Alexander Filatov is an indirect investor in approximately $95 million of Grams,â and âMr. Jelezko and DaVinci entered into purchase agreements with Telegram totaling $72 million.â
Skuratov called the SECâs argument âmeaningless, as it is obvious that the TCF has been created and attracts those who interested in developing TON, including employees of companies that link their future with TON.â
Filatov told CoinDesk he didnât invest. Da Vinci Capital didnât respond to a request for comment by press time.
In any event, Judge P. Kevin Castel asked the foundation for an affidavit with more detail about the organization and the people behind it.
UPDATE (Feb. 19, 01:00 UTC): This article was updated to include the SECâs and the judgeâs responses to the foundationâs brief.