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Zcash’s latest governance crisis moved fast and loud. In less than a day, headlines claimed the project’s “entire core dev team resigned,” ZEC dropped sharply, and social media framed the episode as an existential break. The reality is more precise and more uncomfortable. The builders did leave the Electric Coin Company, but not in the way “resignation” usually implies.
That distinction matters because Zcash has long been one of the crypto sector’s most established privacy-focused networks, built around shielded transactions and zero-knowledge proofs. Its reputation as a privacy-first protocol is the context in which this governance dispute is now being judged.
The episode was triggered by a breakdown in talks over how Zcash-related products, particularly the Zashi wallet, should be governed and potentially restructured. Disagreements emerged over whether parts of the ecosystem could adopt a startup-style model while remaining under nonprofit oversight, as reported by CoinDesk. As those discussions stalled, governance expectations and employment conditions shifted, setting the stage for a collective exit by the team working inside Electric Coin Company.
Electric Coin Company CEO Josh Swihart said the team was “constructively discharged,” arguing that governance changes made it impossible to continue working under the existing structure. In US employment terms, that means conditions changed so deeply that staying became untenable, even if no formal termination letter was issued.
Swihart pointed to what he described as “malicious governance actions” by Bootstrap, the nonprofit that oversees ECC, and said those actions blocked ECC from fulfilling its mandate. The entire team exited together and immediately began forming a new Zcash-focused company.
Over the past few weeks, it's become clear that the majority of Bootstrap board members (a 501(c)(3) nonprofit created to support Zcash by governing the Electric Coin Company), specifically Zaki Manian, Christina Garman, Alan Fairless, and Michelle Lai (ZCAM), have moved into…
— Josh Swihart 🛡 (@jswihart) January 7, 2026
Bootstrap’s response framed the split as a legal and fiduciary problem, not a breakdown of Zcash’s mission. As a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, it said any restructuring, investment, or commercialization around Zashi had to comply with nonprofit law and protect charitable assets from private capture.
Bootstrap acknowledged discussions around alternative structures but warned that the proposed deals could expose the organization to donor lawsuits or forced reversals later. From its perspective, the disagreement was about legal risk and governance duty, not about blocking Zcash development.

This distinction matters. One side frames the exit as a forced removal driven by misalignment. The other frames it as a governance safeguard under nonprofit constraints.
Despite market reaction, the Zcash protocol itself did not stop. It is open-source and designed to operate without a single owner. Network Upgrade 6, finalized earlier, already split development funding across multiple channels, reducing reliance on any one organization.
No single contributor, team, or organization controls Zcash. In fact, Zcash was deliberately designed for resilience. Its codebase is open source, its consensus rules are enforced by independent node operators around the world, and a diverse set of organizations and contributors…
— Zcash Foundation 🛡️ (@ZcashFoundation) January 8, 2026
Market reaction moved faster than facts. ZEC fell around 20% within 24 hours of the initial reports, reflecting how quickly the situation was framed as a full developer resignation. Some ecosystem voices pushed back on that narrative. Developer and commentator Mert argued that the episode was being overstated, saying the builders had shifted from a foundation-linked structure to a startup-style setup rather than exiting Zcash development altogether. From that perspective, the dispute centers on organizational form, not an abandonment of the protocol or its roadmap.
Mert explains the Zcash FUD
“It seems like everyone got faked out by like a few slop content creator types and then Grok summarised it falsely”
“There was this news that the Zcash devs left but all that happened was the devs went from a foundation structure to a tech startup/… pic.twitter.com/KyI5SFkjNU
— CounterParty TV (@counterpartytv) January 8, 2026
Within hours of leaving, the former ECC team announced a new wallet, cashZ, built from the same Zashi codebase. Swihart said no new coin is being launched and that the team remains “100% focused” on Zcash development.
At the time of writing in January 2026, cashZ is pre-launch. There are no published audits or app store listings yet. Users are being asked to wait for verifiable releases before migrating funds.
We are all in on Zcash.
We need to scale Zcash to billions of users.
Startups can scale, but nonprofits can't.
That's why we created a new Zcash startup.https://t.co/ZurjfTxnPi pic.twitter.com/ksnwLewpPp— Josh Swihart 🛡 (@jswihart) January 8, 2026
Social media compressed a structural governance conflict into a single dramatic claim. Price moves amplified that framing. But calling this a resignation obscures the real issue: a clash between nonprofit governance limits and startup-style execution.
Zcash did not lose its protocol. It lost institutional continuity. Whether that becomes a temporary disruption or a lasting fracture now depends on how quickly trust, tooling, and coordination can be rebuilt across the ecosystem.
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