I'm just curious if you feel like these solutions are more immune to the sort of bridge hacks that we've seen more recently, because there is a different approach. Do you feel like in building it this way though, is it safer in a way? Because you have this like like client and you don't have custody or you're not doing anything wrong. And yeah, it hasn't been hacked so far. You can with arbitrary message passing, you can like build anything you want.
In this week’s episode, Anna and Tarun speak with Succinct Labs. Guests Uma Roy and John Guibas discuss their interest in ZK, their work with 0xparc and the goals of Succinct Labs - that is to provide proof of consensus through SNARK-based light clients. Acting similar to IBC, but in the Ethereum context, we discuss the challenge of building ZK-based light clients on Ethereum, their first implementation linking Gnosis Chain to Ethereum, and how they imagine interacting with the larger blockchain space.
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Today's episode is sponsored by Aztec. Aztec Network is building the first privacy-enabled zkRollup on Ethereum.
The team is proud to announce Noir, the world's first universal ZK language. Noir makes it safe and intuitive to write privacy-preserving ZK circuits.
Aztec is now hiring engineers and cryptographers to build the execution layer supporting Noir's private smart contracts.
Join the team making private Ethereum a reality. You can learn more by visiting aztec.network/careers.
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