Threshold cryptography could come in handy to like, prevent because it's hidden a little bit. To do the introprability the right way, it's actually very important to make sure that you don't have order dependence of the messages as you moving them around. And so if you start mixing these things up, which i think a lot of projects have been doing, you're going to run into all kinds of security issues and all kinds of, you know, tolerant problems that you can have to deal with.
This week, Anna catches up with Sergey Gorbunov from Axelar and revisits the topic of bridges. They chat about what led Sergey to work on interoperability, the problems these solutions try to solve, how it compares to existing solutions, and what's next for the project. They also chat about some of the challenges of a multi bridge landscape and the fragmentation of liquidity.
Links for the episode:
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Today’s episode is sponsored by Polygon Zero.
Polygon Zero is a layer 2 scaling solution for Ethereum, powered by Plonky2. A groundbreaking prover system, which generates zk proofs faster than any other existing tech. Plonky2 supports efficient recursive proof generation allowing Polygon Zero to scale horizontally – meaning the throughput of the protocol is limited not by the weakest nodes on the network, but only by the total compute available.
Visit polygon.technology to learn more.
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