It’s a semantics issue. The custodian of an e-cash mint has a completely blind redemption obligation to an entire set of issued tokens. Compare that to an account-based KYC ledger where the custodian has individual redemption obligations to known entities.

In both cases, the custodian can default on its redemption obligation, but in one of them it can do so selectively and targeted, and in a limited capacity, and it can also be compelled by governments to do so. That’s very different than an all-or-nothing default of the mint.

I think these relationships are different enough to necessitate two different terms. Custodian and “guardian” I think is what fedimint uses, right?

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