
Kaspa’s crypto ecosystem just raised some eyebrows. The top 30 non-exchange wallets hold a total of 4.43 billion KAS, about 16% of the total supply.
The top 10 wallets alone make up 12%. And the biggest wallet? A huge 1.4 billion KAS, far outpacing the second-largest wallet. With numbers like these, it’s natural to ask: how decentralized is Kaspa, really?
Despite these concentration numbers, Kaspa’s founder, Yonatan Sompolinsky, sees the project as much bigger than just a token.
Kaspa top 30 non-exchange whale wallets are collectively holding 4.43 billion KAS, representing 16.2% of total supply.
— Kaspa Daily (@DailyKaspa) April 9, 2026
The top 10 alone account for 12% concentration. The largest single wallet dwarfs everything else on the chart at around 1.4 billion KAS, with the gap between… pic.twitter.com/LcrB0JebfY
In a recent talk at the Oxford Union, he framed Kaspa (KAS) and cryptocurrency as tools to build internet-native institutions, not just financial instruments.
His argument is simple: the internet is the world’s largest democracy, but it has no real institutions. People can communicate and transact freely, yet they still rely on banks, courts, or governments to enforce agreements.
Sompolinsky explained that this creates a paradox. The internet connects billions of people but often only forms “shallow” relationships. We interact easily but lack meaningful commitment. His proposed solution isn’t central control or top-down regulation.
Instead, he points to coordination markets, systems designed so that self-interested participants naturally reach cooperative outcomes. According to him, this is what crypto can deliver: real infrastructure for commitment and coordination, without needing to trust a central party.
Kaspa founder Yonatan Sompolinsky delivered an address at the Oxford Union, framing Kaspa and cryptocurrency not as financial tools but as institutional infrastructure for the internet.
— Kaspa Daily (@DailyKaspa) April 9, 2026
The core argument: the internet is the world's largest democracy but has no real…
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This is where Kaspa’s tech comes in. Scalability is the major barrier for most blockchains; they’re slow and expensive, making them unsuitable as a universal coordination layer.
Kaspa (KAS) employs the GHOSTDAG protocol and the BlockDAG architecture, allowing blocks to be verified simultaneously rather than one at a time. This results in high transaction capacity without compromising security or decentralization.
So, while one wallet holding 1.4 billion KAS might sound concerning from a decentralization perspective, the broader vision is clear.
Kaspa (KAS) isn’t just a speculative asset. It’s trying to tackle one of the internet’s deepest challenges: enabling large-scale coordination without relying on central authorities.
If successful, it could become more than a cryptocurrency, it could be the backbone of a new, internet-native system for trust and cooperation.
Kaspa’s journey highlights a tension in crypto today: the challenge of decentralization versus the need for practical infrastructure. One wallet may dominate today, but the real story is whether the system can deliver the coordination and commitment the internet has been missing.
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