The countdown to the ZAMA mainnet launch is getting closer. After years of cryptographic research, it is finally moving from theory to reality, becoming a truly usable network. This project does not pursue speed blindly but focuses on a core challenge: how to achieve true privacy protection on-chain without sacrificing the network's functionality. They are using fully homomorphic encryption as their technical solution, which is a quite hardcore choice. In other words, transaction data can be directly computed and verified in encrypted form, protecting user privacy while not affecting the normal operation of on-chain applications. The maturity of this technological approach signifies a significant step forward in the privacy dimension of Web3.
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BagHolderTillRetire
· 18h ago
Fully homomorphic encryption sounds impressive, but whether it can be practically used once launched remains to be seen.
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Compared to those who shout slogans every day, at least ZAMA didn't boast and just got to work, which is commendable.
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Privacy protection is a necessity, but if performance drops too much, it's game over. It all depends on how they balance it.
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Cryptography has taken ten years to reach the mainnet. I like this pace, much better than those who raise funds in three months.
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Wait, can it really verify directly in encrypted state? If it works, this technology could truly change the game.
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It's full homomorphic encryption again. We've heard this term two years ago, and now finally there's a project daring to use it?
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Privacy + performance, both must be achieved. It's easier said than done. If ZAMA can do it, I’ll admit defeat.
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JustHereForAirdrops
· 12-28 14:26
Fully homomorphic encryption sounds pretty impressive, but I wonder if the TPS can handle it.
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AirdropFatigue
· 12-27 20:56
Homomorphic encryption sounds tough, but if it can really be implemented, privacy can be truly understood.
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Another "coming mainnet," fine, I'll just wait and see.
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No, why should we believe it won't be delayed again this time?
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Cryptography geniuses are finally about to deliver, I have high expectations but no hope.
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Can transactions be directly calculated in encrypted state? If that really works, it’s definitely OP.
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Many projects have claimed they would reshape privacy, but in the end, they all got lost in history.
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A hardcore technical approach + not rushing to launch, this vibe is quite to my taste.
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Privacy protection with full functionality? Sounds good, but it only counts if it can actually be achieved.
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CryptoSourGrape
· 12-27 20:56
If I had gone all in on ZAMA earlier, I wouldn't have to watch others hype it every day. Now it's all too late.
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WalletsWatcher
· 12-27 20:53
Fully homomorphic encryption is essentially a system that allows calculations to be performed directly on encrypted data. If it can truly be implemented in practice, it would be incredible.
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PortfolioAlert
· 12-27 20:33
Fully homomorphic encryption is finally coming to fruition. After waiting so long, it still feels a bit unreal.
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CryptoNomics
· 12-27 20:28
actually, if you run the regression analysis on FHE adoption curves across previous cryptographic breakthroughs, the probability of mainnet success correlating with real ecosystem utility hovers around 47.3%—statistically insignificant without examining the endogenous variables they're conveniently ignoring.
The countdown to the ZAMA mainnet launch is getting closer. After years of cryptographic research, it is finally moving from theory to reality, becoming a truly usable network. This project does not pursue speed blindly but focuses on a core challenge: how to achieve true privacy protection on-chain without sacrificing the network's functionality. They are using fully homomorphic encryption as their technical solution, which is a quite hardcore choice. In other words, transaction data can be directly computed and verified in encrypted form, protecting user privacy while not affecting the normal operation of on-chain applications. The maturity of this technological approach signifies a significant step forward in the privacy dimension of Web3.