Goblin Plunk was released six months ago, but honk is just now being published. Honk should be adding several editions to hyperplunk because it's a very general description of how you plunk when you encode the things over a billion hypercubes. The paper doesn't describe which schemes you can use and therefore all the particular ugly engineering hacks and tricks you can use to make it fast. And so I guess our paper is a, it's a combat collection of the tricks,. It's also got a new multilinear polynomial commitment scheme, which should be more efficient than the other stuff. So that's honk. Now tell us about goblin.
In this week’s episode, host Anna Rose sits down with Zac Williamson, the CEO of Aztec. Anna and Zac dive deep into the history of Plonk, one of the most important proving systems to emerge in the last 5 years. Zac explains how the initial ideas came to be, how it was developed with co-author Ariel Gabizon, and how the system has evolved over time, branching out into many different iterations of Plonk, leading up to his recent work on Goblin Plonk.
The conversation also touches on Aztec's cutting-edge technology stack, including their Noir zkDSL and their planned private programmable L2, Aztec 3. Zac shares his insights on the state of ZK applications and folding schemes, and provides a glimpse into the future of the ZK space.
Here’s some additional links for this episode:
Check out the ZK Jobs Board here: ZK Jobs. Find your next job working in ZK!
Aleo is a new Layer-1 blockchain that achieves the programmability of Ethereum, the privacy of Zcash, and the scalability of a rollup.
Interested in building private applications? Check out Aleo’s programming language called Leo that enables non-cryptographers to harness the power of ZKPs to deploy decentralized exchanges, hidden information games, regulated stablecoins, and more. Visit http://developer.aleo.org.
For questions, join their Discord at aleo.org/discord.
If you like what we do: