
Jorrit Dijkstra
Designed the hybrid public‑permissioned protocol and anchoring modules
Responsible for the core technical architecture that underpins LTO Network’s value proposition as a hybrid workflow blockchain. Architected the split between private workflow chains and a public anchoring layer, specifying how document hashes, anchors and transaction proofs are published on‑chain. Those design choices directly determined the types of on‑chain transactions, gas consumption patterns and where token utility accrues in enterprise use cases. Led the development and release of the network’s core protocol components, including consensus adjustments, node software and APIs used by integrators. Supervised the migration path from the initial ERC‑20 token to native mainnet token handling, drafting the technical migration procedures and swap mechanics that affected circulating supply and wallet compatibility. Commissioned and reviewed security audits, set upgrade and governance mechanisms for protocol patches, and determined how validators and permissioned nodes interact with public anchors. These implementation decisions shaped operational security guarantees and interoperability with external systems. Coordinated with product and business teams to translate enterprise workflow requirements into protocol features such as anchoring intervals, identity attestations and privacy controls. The resulting protocol modules defined measurable demand drivers for the token and set constraints for commercial deployments.
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