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As the CADENA Act positions the Philippines to put its national budget on a blockchain, stakeholders are fiercely divided on how to execute it. To address this, the BitPinas Webcast hosted a debate between Paul Soliman (Bayanichain) and Jason Torres (BetterGov.ph) last Feb. 4, 2026. Blockchain Council of the Philippines President Luis Buenaventura joins BitPinas Editor-in-Chief Michael Mislos to moderate the discussion.
In this article you will find embedded links to the webcast on YouTube and the audio version on Spotify. A recap of what was discussed follows.
Listen on Spotify:
Watch on YouTube
State Tech vs. Civic Tech
The debate opened with both technologists laying out their core missions:
- Soliman positioned Bayanichain as an enterprise-grade builder aiming to âcreate systems for preservation and verifiable data and evidence-backed data for us to be able to have a reference that can outlive us.â
- He added that their goal over the next decade is to âprovide infrastructure to have a sovereign and also neutral ground for data in the near future.â
- Conversely, Torres introduced BetterGov.ph as a grassroots, âcivic tech, open-source movement focusing on making Philippine government data accessible, understandable, and accessible to citizens.â
- Backed by a community of nearly 4,000 members, Torres emphasized their focus on active budget analysis and tracking government procurement.
The Bidding Controversy: Is Bayanichain a Monopoly?
A major point of contention was Bayanichainâs deep involvement in multiple government blockchain initiatives, including projects with the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) and the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT). Critics have raised concerns over vendor lock-in and bidding processes that appear to heavily favor Bayanichain.
Soliman: âWeâre like AWSâ
Soliman defended his companyâs business model by comparing their role to major cloud providers:
âWeâre like AWS, Microsoft Azure, and GCP. We donât really deal directly commercially with the government. In fact, contrary to popular belief, we donât have any commercial government contract.â
Paul Soliman, Bayanichain
He explained that Bayanichain acts solely as a technology provider to partner companies that win government bids. âWe provide the infrastructure and the APIs for them to mint data on the blockchain, and we provide the expertise on smart contracts,â he said.
Torres: Is there a Contract or Not? Are You Being Paid by DBM?
Torres, however, expressed deep skepticism:
âLook, I have no intention to attack this. But you said you donât have a contract, but somewhere there you were slippingâthereâs something in the contract there?â
Jason Torres, BetterGov
Pressing on the financial arrangements, he asked directly, âAre you guys being paid by DBM here? Like whatâs the arrangement there?â
Soliman: Weâre Early Adopters
Addressing the monopoly allegations, Soliman noted that their dominance is a result of being early adopters:
âItâs not our choice. We were the early ones who focused on this three years ago. In terms of monopoly, people can create companies that can create another BYC. We are open to competition. Itâs not our choice to be referenced. Our company is googleable.â
Paul Soliman, Bayanichain
BCP President Luis Buenaventura offered a neutral view. He said Bayanichainâs apparent monopoly probably exists primarily because they were the only provider doing this work for a while. âMonopolies donât exist very long in a market that is actually competitive,â he noted.
Torres to Soliman: âIâm Not Buying Itâ: Vendor Bias and Specificity in RFPs
The most tense exchange of the night occurred when the discussion shifted to how the government writes its Requests for Proposals (RFPs) and bidding documents.
Host Michael Mislos pointed out that some government documents explicitly mention specific technologies, such as Polygon and Prismo, and that projects must be endorsed by the Blockchain Council. This effectively limits who can bid.
Soliman: Weâre Highly Visible
Soliman said the responsibility lies with the agencies: âYou need to ask DBM about it. Itâs not us,â Soliman argued, stating that government agencies likely reference Bayanichainâs tech simply because it is highly visible online. âAgain, we donât have the capability to encode everything there. Itâs their prerogative.â
Torres: Iâm Not Buying It (Solimanâs Explanation)
Torres immediately cut through the corporate defense:
âItâs just⊠Iâm not buying it,â Torres stated flatly. âThatâs my opinion. Iâm not buying that thereâs no sort of influence out there.â
Torres pointed to another specific instance, questioning why âPrismoâ had to be explicitly named in a procurement document. âItâs quite obvious, but I just canât explain it,â he noted.
He stressed the need for technologists to educate bureaucrats to prevent this kind of apparent bias:
âThese bureaucrats, they think blockchain will save us from corruption. We all agree itâs not. But they think they do. We should educate them. Otherwise, youâre going to sound stupid calling a Polygon chain âBayanihanchain.’â
Jason Torres, BetterGov
Infrastructure Battle: Sovereign vs. Public Blockchains
The debate also tackled the underlying infrastructure of the governmentâs blockchain. Early initiatives utilized Polygon, a public Layer 2 scaling solution for Ethereum.
Torres Opposes The Use of Public Chains
Torres strongly opposed the use of public infrastructure for national data, arguing for a strictly sovereign, permissioned Layer 1 blockchain:
âIt clearly states that the platform has to be sovereign, and the infrastructure has to be managed and controlled by the government itself. It has to be known validators. I know there are questions about anonymity â no, they should be known so we can hold them liable.â
Jason Torres, BetterGov
He also warned against the volatility of public chains. âCrypto crashed recently, and weâve seen chains go down or disappear overnight. We donât want our infrastructure hanging on that.â
Soliman: Public Chain For Censorship Resistance
Conversely, Soliman advocated for anchoring data on public blockchains specifically for âcensorship resistance.â While he agreed the government should control the Layer 1 execution layer, he argued that syndicating data to a public chain is essential for longevity:
âLater on, if the administration shifts, the data is still going to be there. How can you do that? You can have multiple public blockchains that cannot be influenced by the government in power.â
Paul Soliman, Bayanichain
Torres agreed that data syndication is crucial, noting that data must go outside to âcitizen analysts.â He added, âIt doesnât matter about garbage in/garbage outâif theyâre putting garbage there, thatâs great because thatâs how you identify fraud.â
The âMintingâ Approach: Insurance or Overengineering?
The clash in methodologies was most evident when discussing specific use cases, such as tracking government laptop procurements.
Soliman on Why Minting is the Approach
Soliman explained that Bayanichain utilizes the ERC-721A standard for âinscription.â He clarified this isnât for digital art, but for securing documents. âWe use âInscriptionâ â we donât play with metadata, we put the data on the block itself for permanence,â Soliman explained.
He argued that if a procurement record is minted directly on-chain, it acts as an immutable safeguard.
âItâs easy to change something in the ERP because itâs driven by administrative function. For me, blockchain is insurance so that later on, these bad actors that want to edit data can be disputed.â
Paul Soliman, Bayanichain
Torres: This is Overengineering
Torres was highly critical of this approach:
âParticularly the minting. Thatâs something Iâm completely against. I donât think thatâs the right way. Thatâs overengineering, hence using blockchain to track simple laptop procurements is unnecessary. You donât need blockchain for this. You need data science and AI to identify whether this procurement is unusual.â
Jason Torres, BetterGov
Torres emphasized that blockchain should be reserved for the complex journey of large infrastructure projects:
âWe record the journey, not just the outcome. Thatâs what we need the blockchain forâto form the story from Point A to Point Z.â
Jason Torres, BetterGov
Open Source vs. Legal Accountability
When asked about the viability of using a purely open-source model like BetterGovâs âOpenGovChain,â the two differed on legal and operational realities.
Torres on Open-Source Standard
Torres championed the open-source standard, comparing it to established tech ecosystems.
âFollowing the Linux model, you have the Linux Foundation, but you have companies like Red Hat engaging with the enterprise. Anybody can pick up OpenGovChain and become a service provider⊠When I launched it, by Monday I already had 10 validators.â
Jason Torres, BetterGov
Soliman on Why Not Open-Source
Soliman countered that government contracts require strict accountability that a loose open-source model cannot easily provide.
âSince we have MOA and legal obligations, thatâs our problem. We cannot create an oracle or put data on Ethereum loosely, because we need to follow a certain scope⊠and there are legal consequences if we donât deliver or go offline.â
Paul Soliman, Bayanichain
Closing Thoughts: A Push for Course Correction
Despite their sharp disagreements, both technologists expressed mutual respect.
Torres: Credit where Credit is Due
Torres commended Soliman for bringing the issue to the forefront. âPaul, you guys did a good job surfacing the blockchain initiatives to the country. Credit where credit is due,â Torres said, though he added a warning: âI just want you to do it right and we need to slow down a bit⊠Tell them to slow down. Do this correctly.â
Soliman: We are All Builders
Soliman reciprocated, praising BetterGov. âWe donât have beef with the community. We are builders,â Soliman said. âThe good thing about Jason and BetterGov is it is a necessary civic movement. There needs to be a third party.â
Buenaventura: BCP has a Massive Task Ahead
Acknowledging the friction and the massive task ahead, BCP President Buenaventura admitted that the Council was unprepared for how high the stakes have become. âI knew this job was going to be pretty tricky. Iâm not going to sugarcoat this. The Blockchain Council has a lot of work to do,â Buenaventura stated.
Promising greater transparency moving forward, he concluded: âIt is messy, but maybe the first step is acknowledging that it is messy and we kind of screwed up a little bit here.â
This article is published on BitPinas: Government Blockchain | Webcast
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