Google Cloud and MoneyGram just signed on to run launch Midnight nodes for new privacy network banks want

Google Cloud and MoneyGram just signed on to run launch Midnight nodes for new privacy network banks want


Google Cloud, MoneyGram, Vodafone’s Pairpoint, and eToro will run launch-phase nodes on Midnight, a zero-knowledge privacy network targeting a mainnet launch at the end of March 2026.

The pitch isn’t anonymity, but selective disclosure. It’s the ability to prove compliance or settlement eligibility without broadcasting raw customer data onto a public ledger.

Mainnet clock
Midnight’s Kūkolu mainnet launches at the end of March 2026 with federated operators, with a transition to broader decentralization planned but not yet scheduled.

Midnight describes these operators as “federated,” meaning a limited, named set running the protocol under explicit coordination rules to prioritize uptime and operational stability during the Kūkolu launch phase.

This phase will be followed by an eventual transition to broader community-driven decentralization, flagged as the Foundation’s intent but not yet scheduled.

This isn’t privacy coins. It’s a zero-knowledge tool that lets firms share verifiable proofs, such as KYC status, eligibility constraints, and settlement completion, while keeping sensitive customer and business data out of public view.

Privacy with guardrails

Midnight’s core claim is that institutions need privacy primitives that don’t trip regulatory wires.

The network uses zero-knowledge proofs to enable selective disclosure: a bank proves it ran AML checks without revealing transaction details, and a broker proves customer accreditation without revealing the customer’s identity.

Disclosure must be explicitly stated in applications, such as “privacy-by-default, disclosure-by-choice” in the network’s framing, making it legible to compliance teams rather than a regulatory red flag.

The federated operator model reflects a deliberate trade-off between centralization.

Launch stability matters more than ideological purity when regulated firms test production workloads, so Midnight starts with a curated set of node operators who commit to participating and adhering to coordination rules.

The Foundation says it intends to transition away from this federated structure toward full decentralization later, but no timeline or criteria have been published.

The real-world implication: Midnight prioritizes operational reliability over censorship resistance at genesis, betting that enterprise-grade infrastructure today builds credibility for broader validator participation tomorrow.

Blue-chip infrastructure players

Google Cloud brings cloud infrastructure and references its Confidential Computing capabilities alongside Mandiant monitoring.

Blockdaemon, which Midnight notes secures over $110 billion in digital assets, joins as a validator services provider. AlphaTON and Shielded Technologies round out the infrastructure side.

The regulated business operators add distribution credibility.

MoneyGram operates in more than 200 countries and territories, giving the network a payments-infrastructure footprint. Pairpoint, the Vodafone and Sumitomo venture, ties in telecom and IoT angles. eToro, with over 35 million users, represents a brokerage and retail trading infrastructure.

Operator Category What it signals (1 line)
Google Cloud Cloud/infra Enterprise hosting + security tooling (Confidential Computing/Mandiant refs)
Blockdaemon Validator services Institutional-grade validation + “$110B+ secured” claim
AlphaTON Infra Technical operator capacity
Shielded Technologies Infra Privacy/security alignment
MoneyGram Payments Distribution footprint (“200+ countries/territories” claim)
Pairpoint (Vodafone/Sumitomo) Telco/IoT Enterprise connectivity + data flows angle
eToro Brokerage/retail Retail rails (“35M+ users” claim)
Remaining operators TBD (optional) “Reported target: 10 nodes” (if you keep that line)

MoneyGram, Pairpoint, and eToro represent three of ten launch nodes, suggesting Midnight plans to name additional operators before the end of the March deadline.

The Foundation hasn’t published a full roster yet, leaving the final composition partially undefined.

The privacy gap gets quantified

Midnight cites research from Aleo’s 2025 Privacy Gap Report, which claims $1.22 trillion in institutional stablecoin transaction volume, with only 0.0013% settling on privacy-enabled rails.

Privacy-rails gapPrivacy-rails gap
Privacy-enabled stablecoin settlement currently represents 0.0013% of volume, with scenarios projecting growth to 0.08-1% as compliance tooling matures.

The framing positions privacy not as a niche crypto-native feature but as an institutional bottleneck: massive on-chain flows moving on transparent infrastructure because compliant privacy tooling doesn’t exist yet.

The timing forces an operator-first strategy. With a mainnet deadline at the end of March, Midnight needed a credible node set locked in early enough to test coordination, uptime, and operational playbooks before genesis.

Recruiting household names, such as cloud providers, payment processors, and telcos, signals enterprise-grade seriousness and creates a trust anchor for early applications.

Broader privacy demand shows up in mainstream surveys. Midnight references Pew Research, which found 81% of respondents were concerned about how companies use their data, with 62% saying it’s impossible to go through daily life without corporations collecting information.

Enterprise primitive vs. federated theater

The bull case treats selective disclosure as a missing primitive for on-chain finance.

Blue-chip operators signal infrastructure and regulatory credibility at launch. Privacy-with-proofs solves real compliance friction: prove you ran checks, prove counterparty eligibility, prove settlement constraints, all without exposing customer records or proprietary business data to public chains.

If successful, Midnight becomes the compliance layer for tokenized securities, payment rails, and identity verification that need verifiable privacy.

The skeptic case sees federated launch as trust assumptions dressed up as pragmatism. A curated operator set running under coordination rules isn’t censorship-resistant decentralization, but a permissioned network with a roadmap promise.

Big names don’t guarantee usage. The real test is whether production applications ship and whether the Foundation publishes credible criteria and timelines for opening validation beyond the initial set.

Operators as distribution infrastructure

Node operators don’t just validate transactions, they function as distribution and trust infrastructure.
Google Cloud signals developer tooling and enterprise cloud integration. MoneyGram and Pairpoint represent payments and IoT data flows. eToro represents retail trading on-ramps.

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