What if the internet could run fully encrypted computations without sacrificing performance or control? In this episode of Tech Talks Daily, I sit down with Yannik Schrade, CEO and Co-Founder of Arcium, to explore how confidential computing is reshaping the future of digital infrastructure.
Arcium is building what Yannik describes as an encrypted supercomputer, a decentralized network that allows data to stay encrypted even during processing. This approach gives developers and organizations a way to build privacy-first applications across sectors like healthcare, finance, artificial intelligence, and government services.
We talk through how Arcium leverages secure multi-party computation to make this possible and why that matters in a world where sensitive data is often a liability.
Yannik explains how Arcium enables companies to collaborate without revealing proprietary data, and how it allows for mathematically provable trust in digital processes. From private order books in financial systems to AI models that train on encrypted health data, the scope of this technology is already expanding into real-world use cases.
We also explore the importance of decentralization, not just as a technical feature, but as a way to reframe the conversation around digital sovereignty, compliance, and individual freedom. Yannik reflects on his own journey from app developer to cryptography leader, and how his background in computer science, mathematics, and law helped shape his vision for Arcium.
If you’re navigating challenges around data privacy, regulation, or AI ethics, or if you're curious about what confidential computing can unlock, this is a conversation that brings clarity to an area often clouded by hype. What would your organization build if privacy was no longer a limitation but a default capability? Let me know after you’ve listened.