Etherland is a blockchain-based decentralized infrastructure project that aims to provide a unified “Hub and Spokes” framework for data management, identity, and compliance across multiple industries through a core platform and vertical applications. Public materials position the project to support enterprise-grade use cases with a hub whitepaper, sector-specific documents, and an ecosystem token referenced as ELAND. [1] [2]
Etherland frames its approach around a central infrastructure “Hub” and industry-specific “Spokes.” The Hub is presented as the foundational layer describing technical architecture, tokenomics, market analysis, a multi‑year roadmap, and investor materials, while the Spokes represent vertical applications addressing use cases in ultra‑luxury assets, cultural heritage, and real-estate ESG. Where numerical market figures are cited—such as a $2.4 trillion total addressable market for the Hub—these are presented in project materials without independent verification in the public excerpts provided. [1]
Across its public site and documentation index, Etherland states that it aims to integrate decentralized storage, verifiable identity, granular access control, and file authentication into one platform supporting multiple industry solutions. The project’s materials describe an enterprise-facing posture with consulting and implementation services, a suite of vertical papers, and references to token economics for an ecosystem token labeled ELAND. While the architecture pillars are outlined, detailed specifications, audited implementations, and comprehensive technical diagrams are not presented in the examined excerpts. [2] [1]
Etherland’s public resources list a Hub whitepaper, vertical whitepapers or litepapers for the MyAttendant, MyLegacy, and MyCompliance solutions, a “Hub Deck” and token-economics documents, and community channels on X (Twitter), Telegram, and Discord. A developer or launch initiative referred to as a “Launchpad program” is noted as to be announced. A published timestamp appears on the primary site page reviewed and a 2026 copyright notice are shown, but no founding date, launch date, or named team roster are included in the provided excerpts. [2] [1]
MyAttendant is positioned as a vertical application built on Etherland’s Hub for luxury inventory and ultra‑high‑value assets. Project materials describe it as addressing secure custody, inventory management, and provenance for family offices and high‑net‑worth asset owners. Documentation references claims of “military‑grade” security, a five‑tier hierarchical design, and quantum‑resistant encryption, presented without public third‑party validation in the examined excerpts. The target context cited includes family offices controlling over $10 trillion in assets, framed as a market background rather than a user metric. [1] [2]
MyLegacy is described as a cultural heritage archiving solution centering on decentralized records and a “contribute‑to‑earn” economic model to incentivize building an archive. Market opportunity is presented with a $45 billion target by 2035 in the project’s materials. These figures and the economic model are reported as project claims in the public excerpts without independent corroboration. [1] [2]
MyCompliance is presented as an ESG-focused solution for real estate that aims to automate compliance workflows, documentation, and reporting with AI-assisted features. Materials cite a $5.85 trillion market opportunity and a goal of reducing certification timelines by 60% across frameworks such as LEED, BREEAM, GRESB, and the EU Taxonomy. These performance and market claims appear as stated objectives in project literature rather than independently verified results in the sources summarized here. [1] [2]
Etherland’s public-facing materials present implementation and consulting services aimed at enterprises seeking to integrate decentralized infrastructure into existing workflows. Calls-to-action include scheduling meetings and consultations, alongside references to a Launchpad program marked as “to be announced,” suggesting an intended developer or partner onboarding pathway that is not yet detailed in the examined sources. [2]
Etherland’s platform description emphasizes four core infrastructure pillars intended to underpin its vertical applications:
These pillars are presented at a conceptual level on the public site, without protocol-level technical documentation, code references, or audit reports provided in the excerpts reviewed. [2]
The Hub, referenced as Etherland’s foundational component, is reported to consist of a 70+ page documentation set covering market opportunity analysis (including a stated $2.4 trillion total addressable market), technical architecture overviews (naming DEFS, DIDs, UFAC, and APFA), ELAND tokenomics, a team overview, a five‑year roadmap, and investor materials. The public excerpts do not include the underlying detailed specifications or the full text of the technical sections, and several of the named components are referenced without definitions in those materials; however, the site-level descriptions provide high-level meanings for the four pillars. [1] [2]
Security-related claims appear in connection with the MyAttendant vertical, including “military‑grade” protection and “quantum‑resistant encryption.” These characterizations are reported in the project’s own materials and are not accompanied by third‑party certifications or cryptographic audit references in the analyzed excerpts. As such, they are best regarded as unverified claims pending vetted documentation. [1]
These use cases are presented in Etherland’s informational materials as intended applications of the Hub and associated verticals; the provided sources do not include deployment metrics or case studies validating operational performance. [1] [2]
Etherland’s ecosystem token is $ELAND with a fixed total supply of 1,000,000,000. The token model is described as combining a fixed‑supply design with buyback mechanisms funded by platform activity and staking/long‑term locks that aim to reduce circulating supply and align stakeholders. [3]
These utilities are documented on the tokenomics page describing ELAND’s roles across products and staking mechanisms. [3]
The tokenomics page also outlines initial circulation at TGE, vesting/lock schedules, and phased release targets to support gradual market absorption. [3]