For the past few years, three separate teams Codex, Nomos, and Waku have been building core components of decentralized infrastructure. Each had its own brand and community, but they were ultimately working toward the same bigger goal: building technology and a movement aimed at restoring digital freedom and strengthening civil society.
Today, that goal officially comes under one flag. Codex, Nomos, and Waku are merging into a single unified identity: Logos.
This move isn’t just a rebrand it’s a consolidation of direction.
Instead of three projects working in parallel, Logos now becomes one cohesive ecosystem with over 200 contributors, 26 repositories, and community chapters across 18 regions.
A unified stack built from years of independent innovation
Even if the brands were different, the tools complemented each other:
Codex gave users censorship-resistant storage and durable data.
Nomos built a private Layer 1 chain for sovereign coordination.
Waku created a privacy-first messaging protocol for peer-to-peer communication.
On their own, each had value. Together, they finally form the complete puzzle: storage, messaging, and consensus integrated into one privacy-preserving stack instead of living as isolated protocols.
The result is a developer toolkit where privacy isn’t an afterthought it’s the default.
“Integration unlocks impact,” said Jarrad Hope, Co-Founder of Logos.
“By unifying the technology stack, we give people a straight path to building and living in a private, sovereign digital environment.”
That means developers will soon be able to plug in modules from storage to messaging to consensus like assembling LEGO bricks, but for digital autonomy.
What’s coming next
The Logos team plans to ship a “batteries-included” toolkit that makes building sovereign digital infrastructure much simpler. The roadmap includes:
Broad access for all users from the start
Clean docs and an actually enjoyable dev experience
Real applications that solve real problems
Distribution paths that reach beyond crypto-native audiences
The goal isn’t just to deliver a protocol it’s to deliver something usable on day one. Logos aims for a public testnet in 2026 and mainnet in 2027.
More than a product a movement
Logos has always carried a social and philosophical mission alongside the tech. It’s about strengthening digital self-determination, enabling free association, and rebuilding trust in online systems.
With the unified brand, Logos is encouraging users to get involved early including running nodes and helping shape the network from the ground up. Details about this initiative are available through the Logos node program.
In short, Logos isn’t just merging three projects. It’s creating a foundation for a new kind of digital society one that’s privacy-first, voluntary, and built by people instead of platforms.