☁️ Google Cloud Launches Private Blockchain Pilot for Payments & Finance
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Google Cloud is officially testing its own layer-1 blockchain, called Google Cloud Universal Ledger (GCUL) — designed for cross-border payments, financial products, and asset tokenization.
What We Know So Far
Announced by Rich Widmann, Head of Web3 Strategy at Google Cloud.
GCUL is a “neutral” private system built for banks & financial institutions.
Features include:
Smart contracts in Python.
Integration with multiple wallets.
Support for fiat + digital assets.
Built-in compliance tools (KYC, fee monitoring, data protection).
Focus on low cost & high speed transactions.
Use Cases
Automating payment services.
Full-cycle digital asset workflows: issuance, administration & settlement (e.g., bonds, investment funds).
Potentially routing payments through central bank deposits or money market funds (via licensed intermediaries).
Access Model
Enterprises will interact with GCUL via API, just like other Google Cloud services.
Google says the system may become more open as regulations evolve.
Early participants include CME Group (derivatives marketplace), which plans to use GCUL for asset tokenization in 2026.
Big Picture
Google Cloud is moving deeper into Web3 infrastructure, not with a public chain like Ethereum, but with a compliance-first, enterprise-grade blockchain.
If successful, GCUL could set a precedent for how tech giants and TradFi institutions merge payments, tokenization, and regulated digital assets.What’s your take?
Is this the start of “Big Tech Blockchains” dominating enterprise finance?
Or will private ledgers like GCUL always play second fiddle to public blockchains?