Privacy on Ethereum is already here.
Aztec is the L2 that allows developers with no prior cryptography background to build smart contracts with private identity, data, and compute.
Read how Aztec delivers granular programmable privacy to Ethereum: aztec.network/blog/the-aztecβ¦
This week on Aztec: Noir goes cross-chain to Solana, operator survey results, new Wonderland collabs, and education to get you building in under a minute. Here's the recap.
ICYMI: Want to see selective disclosure in action? The PrivPNL demo walks you through private trades to a browser-generated ZK proof of your profit.
Try it yourself: x.com/Aztec_Dev/status/20619β¦
Here's a 90-second tutorial on PrivPnL (aztec-pnl-proof.vercel.app/), the demo linked in our new article.
Make a private DEX trade, then generate a browser-side ZK proof of PnL using a tagging key.
Auditors can verify the event, but your portfolio and trade history stay private.
For all these updates and more, follow @aztecnetwork, @aztec_dev, @aztecFND and @NoirLang.
If you enjoyed this recap or are interested in programmable privacy onchain, comment and repost!
Private accounts added directly into your existing wallets on Ethereum are possible now with @nyxmoney π
More invite codes for testers coming soon π
Building on Aztec is easier than you think!
@CiaraNightingal shows you how to deploy a smart contract from scratch in under 60 seconds: install, create, compile, deploy.
If you've been interested in building on Aztec but haven't started yet, this is your sign π
Privacy on @solana comes as three modular options you combine by use case:
- Confidential balances, built into the token program.
- Contra, a state channel for thousands of private transactions with mainnet liquidity intact.
- @NoirLang, @aztecnetwork's zk language, now coming to solana.
Aztec has been collaborating with @Wonderland to extend what's possible on the Protocol.
From new token standards to developer tooling to wallet UX, here's a look at what's actively being shipped and what's coming next π
This week on Aztec: a deep dive on who really controls your privacy, a quarterly report from Nethermind, new developer education on selective disclosure, and a primer on how Aztec's state model works. Here's the recap π§΅
Finally, one thing to know about Aztec if you're coming from Ethereum: Aztec has both private and public state.
Check out the thread below for a walkthrough on how it works:
x.com/aztecnetwork/status/20β¦
For all these updates and more, be sure to follow @aztecnetwork, @aztec_dev, @aztecFND and @NoirLang.
If you enjoyed this recap or are interested in programmable privacy onchain, comment and repost, and let us know what you'd like to see covered in the coming weeks!