Scan to download
BTC $60,764.72 -0.80%
ETH $1,565.73 -1.66%
BNB $574.04 -0.44%
XRP $1.09 -1.59%
SOL $62.23 -3.74%
TRX $0.3229 +0.75%
DOGE $0.0818 -1.08%
ADA $0.1574 -2.14%
BCH $216.31 +1.13%
LINK $7.40 -0.41%
HYPE $57.21 -5.73%
AAVE $61.04 -3.09%
SUI $0.7204 -0.53%
XLM $0.2098 +3.28%
ZEC $369.88 -5.43%
BTC $60,764.72 -0.80%
ETH $1,565.73 -1.66%
BNB $574.04 -0.44%
XRP $1.09 -1.59%
SOL $62.23 -3.74%
TRX $0.3229 +0.75%
DOGE $0.0818 -1.08%
ADA $0.1574 -2.14%
BCH $216.31 +1.13%
LINK $7.40 -0.41%
HYPE $57.21 -5.73%
AAVE $61.04 -3.09%
SUI $0.7204 -0.53%
XLM $0.2098 +3.28%
ZEC $369.88 -5.43%

a16z Crypto updates Jolt zkVM to natively support zero-knowledge proofs and questions the misuse of the "ZK" label

2026-03-04 08:25:19
Collection

According to The Block, a16z Crypto criticized the colloquial use of the term "ZK" in certain developer environments in a blog post about its Jolt zkVM. The article pointed out that most zkVMs do not actually possess zero-knowledge properties unless expensive "wrapping" programs are applied. The author also mentioned that "zk" often becomes synonymous with "conciseness," meaning "short proofs that verify quickly," rather than true zero-knowledge privacy.

As the community's focus on privacy grows, the misuse of this terminology is becoming a real issue. a16z's open-source Jolt zkVM launched a major upgrade on Tuesday, natively supporting zero-knowledge proofs. Jolt employs the NovaBlindFold folding scheme to create blinded proofs to prevent information leakage, making it suitable for privacy applications, with the zero-knowledge proofs generated after the upgrade only increasing by about 3 KB compared to the original non-ZK proofs.

app_icon
ChainCatcher Building the Web3 world with innovations.