I wrote this article because of the way BayaniChain brands itself as a blockchain.
That branding matters; especially when applied to government systems, public records, and national accountability. Blockchain is not just a buzzword; it is a specific class of technology with defined properties: decentralization, independent consensus, verifiable finality, and trust minimization.
The moment a system presents itself as a blockchain for governance, it invites scrutiny.
That scrutiny becomes unavoidable when we ask a simple but critical question:
Can BayaniChain still be called a blockchain if Polygon is taken out of the picture?
In my assessment, the answer is no; and that is where the branding becomes questionable.
Polygon is not a minor component of the BayaniChain stack.
It is the only actual blockchain involved.
Polygon provides:
Consensus
Validators
Block production
Finality
Immutability
Public verifiability
Without Polygon, there is no blockchain behavior left and only centralized systems performing hashing and API orchestration.
More importantly, Polygon is:
A foreign public blockchain
Designed primarily for DeFi and general-purpose applications
Not sovereign
Not built, governed, or operated within the Philippines
This matters deeply when blockchain is proposed as part of national governance infrastructure.
This article intentionally relies only on BayaniChain’s official website, published descriptions, and architectural explanations.
The reason is simple:
There is no publicly available source code repository to analyze.
BayaniChain does not disclose:
Protocol source code
Node software
Consensus rules
Validator logic
Governance mechanisms
Reproducible deployment instructions
In blockchain systems, source code is not a bonus, it is the foundation of trust. When it is absent, the only accountable basis for analysis is what the organization publicly claims.
This article therefore evaluates BayaniChain on its own words, not assumptions.
Lumen is described as:
“A Blockchain-as-a-Service platform built for public systems.”
From official descriptions, Lumen:
Receives data from government systems via API
Hashes documents and metadata
Mints ERC-721 tokens
Anchors those tokens on Polygon
Provides an explorer or API for verification
What Lumen does not provide:
No independent consensus mechanism
No validator network
No block production
No protocol-level governance
No sovereign control
Technically, Lumen is a blockchain-anchoring service, not a blockchain.
Prismo is presented as a private accountability layer.
Based on published materials, Prismo:
Handles encrypted workflow data
Manages permissions and access
Stores internal records and approvals
Operates as a permissioned system
Prismo is a centralized government IT platform enhanced with cryptographic tooling. It does not decentralize trust; it concentrates it.
BayaniChain describes Lumen and Prismo as operating together in a dual-orchestrator architecture.
In practice, this means:
Prismo decides what data is valid
Lumen publishes selected outputs
Polygon finalizes those outputs on-chain
The trust flow is:
Government → Prismo → Lumen → Polygon
This allows the public to verify what was published, but not:
What was withheld
What was delayed
What was filtered
What never made it on-chain
This is transparency of artifacts, not transparency of process.
BayaniChain frames records as Digital Public Assets (DPAs).
However, based on their own documentation:
DPAs are issued by vendor-controlled systems
Their existence depends on Polygon
Their rules are not protocol-defined
Their governance is not public or sovereign
Calling these public assets becomes problematic when:
The blockchain is foreign
The control logic is private
The code is undisclosed
At that point, DPAs function more like vendor-issued digital certificates than sovereign digital records.
A useful test is this:
If the third-party blockchain is removed, does the system still qualify as a blockchain?
In BayaniChain’s case:
Remove Polygon -> no consensus
Remove Polygon -> no finality
Remove Polygon -> no immutability
Remove Polygon -> no public verification
What remains is a centralized platform with hashing.
This is not deception but it is blockchain theater when branded otherwise.
This article does not argue against using blockchain for governance.
It does not argue against anchoring records on public chains.
It argues for precision and honesty in language, especially when:
Public trust is involved
National sovereignty is implicated
Government systems are at stake
Based strictly on BayaniChain’s own official materials, and in the absence of open source code:
BayaniChain is not a blockchain. Lumen is not a blockchain. Prismo is not a blockchain. Polygon is the blockchain and it is neither sovereign nor Philippine-built.
That distinction matters.
Original post: https://greenarmor.pw/blog/bayanichain-blockchain-without-polygon
