New Ideas for the ZK Privacy Layer



The Brevis project has a somewhat different understanding of privacy computing. The key point is—how to keep the trusted mechanism while hiding the sensitive computation logic.

1️⃣ Privacy technology will become a focus in 2026
More and more projects are realizing a problem: on-chain data transparency is an advantage, but commercial computations cannot be fully public. Brevis's approach is to use zero-knowledge proofs to make data verifiable, while keeping the computation process itself private.

2️⃣ How this differs from traditional privacy solutions
Traditional methods involve encrypting and storing data. Brevis aims to prove that the computation results are correct without exposing intermediate steps—which is crucial for DeFi protocols and institutional applications.
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OfflineValidatorvip
· 5h ago
Honestly, I can't quite understand this logic. Why hide the intermediate steps? Isn't it more vulnerable to attacks?
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LongTermDreamervip
· 5h ago
Oh no, ZK really needs to be taken seriously. Privacy computing might truly explode in three years. I was just thinking that if this thing gets widespread, those institutions will dare to step in for real. Before, there were obstacles. I think the Brevis approach is reliable—it's about proving you're right without telling me how you're right. For DeFi, that's a lifesaver.
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PoetryOnChainvip
· 5h ago
Really, someone finally understands the ZK approach. All those previous privacy solutions were just messing around; the Brevis idea is indeed brilliant.
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fren.ethvip
· 5h ago
Zero-knowledge proofs are indeed a breakthrough, but whether Brevis can truly be implemented depends on its execution capability.
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ImpermanentPhobiavip
· 6h ago
Alright, ZK stuff is indeed getting more and more competitive, but I think the Brevis approach is still somewhat interesting. Finally, someone has thought of a balance between transparency and privacy. Zero-knowledge proofs, to put it simply, are just about proving that I deserve your trust without revealing everything. No need to expose all your secrets. This is really appealing to institutional users. I'm just worried that before 2026, this thing might fall into some new vicious cycle again. Who knows?
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