Want Privacy? Don’t Use Blockchain Yet

Blockchains should empower individuals, not subject them to the most invasive surveillance the web has ever seen

OPINION
article-image

Swill Klitch/Shutterstock modified by Blockworks

share

A blockchain is just a ledger. 

My bank also maintains a ledger of account balances and transactions. 

However, unlike the Bitcoin and Ethereum blockchains, my view of that bank ledger is limited only to information that pertains to me. Checking my bank accounts shows me only my balances, not how much money my neighbor has at this bank, or my boss has in his savings account, or any random stranger’s balance. With the non-crypto financial system today, there is an implicitly implied level of privacy. 

But this is different from how today’s public blockchains work. 

As innovative as blockchain’s concept of “programmable money” is, it is also arguably the most invasive technology we’ve ever created from a user-privacy standpoint. 

We’re definitely still early

These are still early days in blockchain, which often invites comparisons to the early eras of the internet.

The early web was unusable for transacting at all because there was no end-to-end encryption protecting consumer payment information as it transited between HTTP servers. This left it vulnerable to “man-in-the-middle” attacks in which a snooping hacker could easily steal everyone’s credit card details.

Netscape, the first web browser, played a crucial role in solving that problem by creating the Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) protocol, which encrypts traffic between parties over the web. 

Today, almost every website uses these encryption protocols by default, as do many popular messaging services. 

Crypto has come a long way from the cypherpunk days of Bitcoin, and an even longer way from the days when sending transactions via the early web left you vulnerable to credit card fraud.

But are we content with the primarily speculative use cases that dominate Web3 today? Or do we believe that Web3 can actually reshape not only finance, but the way we interact online? 

If we accept the premise that blockchain is a privacy-invasive technology at its core, then it’s clear that to become actually useful, blockchain needs an equivalent to the SSL innovation that brought Web2 out of its essentially unusable, lack-of-privacy era.

Zero-knowledge cryptography, and the protocols integrating it, is the best chance this industry has to have a scalable, secure, and compliant infrastructure.

By functionally encrypting the blockchain ledgers and allowing users to prove facts about their data using zero-knowledge proofs, we can protect sensitive user data while at the same time ensuring regulatory compliance.

Zero-knowledge proofs open up an entirely new design space and exponentially increase the available market of blockchain-related products. By integrating this technology, next-generation blockchains can afford users the privacy they are accustomed to, and often legally entitled to, while enhancing regulatory compliance.

These are the “use cases” that blockchain skeptics have long been demanding. 



Start your day with top crypto insights from David Canellis and Katherine Ross. Subscribe to the Empire newsletter.

Tags

Upcoming Events

Salt Lake City, UT

WED - FRI, OCTOBER 9 - 11, 2024

Pack your bags, anon — we’re heading west! Join us in the beautiful Salt Lake City for the third installment of Permissionless. Come for the alpha, stay for the fresh air. Permissionless III promises unforgettable panels, killer networking opportunities, and mountains […]

recent research

Screen Shot 2024-05-16 at 14.53.45.png

Research

Loss-versus-rebalancing (LVR) is arguably Ethereum DeFi’s biggest problem, and thus reducing LVR is fundamental to the success of Ethereum. This report dives into the world of LVR. We uncover its importance for AMM designers, discuss the two major mechanism design categories and various projects developing solutions, and offer a higher level perspective on the importance of AMMs in general.

article-image

We need this repeal for the future of our digital economy, the safe custody of cryptocurrencies and the good of the American investor

article-image

The Senate will vote on the anti-SAB 121 resolution tomorrow, and it looks like there are enough Democrats on board to get the legislation to the president’s desk, according to people familiar with the matter

article-image

How Helium Mobile’s plan to decentralize cell coverage is catching on

article-image

The two brothers were arrested in New York and Boston, and they face two courts later Wednesday

article-image

The fund giant will ultimately offer a bitcoin ETF, Digital Assets Council of Financial Professionals founder says

article-image

Just a few months after it confidentially filed for a US IPO, the company is planning to jump across the pond