Vision
7 Mar
## min read

Regeneration: a Manifesto for an Autonomous Future

This piece, written by Zac Williamson with insights from Arnaud Schenk, delves into the evolving landscape of blockchain technology and its impact on societal structures.

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Written by
Zac Williamson
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The following is written by Zac Williamson, with inspiration and advice from Arnaud Schenk.

My fellow companions, my decentralized brothers and sisters. I wish to tell you a story, about complicated people and their struggles to resolve the wreckage of their contradictions. It is a story of humanity.

We are at a unique point in history and stand at the threshold of two worlds. One world is a propagation of our present, a status quo antebellum with all of its associated joys and sorrows.

There is another door, one hidden from view except for those with the sight to see it. You and I are here because we see a unique vision of the future, one of high technology and high ideals, that advance human beings from their status as a commodity resource in a globalized world, to free actors imbued with autonomy and purpose, who bow to no one.

I want to articulate this vision and examine the forces that drive us. Despite our successes and dedication it is clear that our current achievements fall short of our aspirations. We must reconcile this.

Bitcoin is not yet a credible threat to traditional currencies. Paying for goods and services with cryptocurrency is a niche luxury for the technologically well-connected. Decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) are yet to govern anything that is not a cryptocurrency project. A notable exception was ConstitutionDAO, which immediately failed in its goals due to the intrinsic limitations of trustless blockchain networks.

There are missing pieces in the technological armaments we have fashioned. I want to show you the missing pieces. I want to go back to the roots: what are the systems and frameworks we want to disrupt? Which properties do blockchain networks need for us to forge a conspiracy against the present, and fight for our vision of the future?

Control Factions

Reaching back into prehistory, humanity has been waging a war against itself – a war that pits the freedom and autonomy of individuals against the safety and control of institutions.

We want to be free. We want to be safe. This is the eternal contradiction.

To acquire safety we bind ourselves to institutions. Within these institutions, control factions form. They metastasize and act to entrench their power and influence by monopolizing human agency. This triggers inevitable conflict and revolt, which acts to reset the equilibrium.

How best we can resolve the contradiction between freedom and safety is a function of social organization, the quality of which is gated behind technological innovation.

Blockchain is one such technology. To identify what we need, we must identify the weaknesses of the institutions we seek to undermine, and tailor our strengths against them.

The competency crisis

Control factions have a fatal weakness: they reject competence.

Competent people threaten individuals within entrenched power structures. A competent subordinate is a threat to your power and privileges. This is the so-called “dictator trap”, but the mechanics at play extend to all power structures, from the boards of mega-corporations to the local residents association. But it’s not a dictator trap, it is an institution trap.

Power craves legibility and predictability and will act on these desires by exerting control – limiting agency and freedom of action.

Re-distributing institutional control

We want to undermine institutional control, and redistribute control down to smaller units of organization.

Blockchain technology enables such radical new forms of social organization that fall outside the frameworks of traditional institutions.

We possess a keystone technology that enables mass peer-to-peer coordination, initially of cryptocurrency assets but this can be generalized to anything with perceived value that can be given a digital fingerprint.

Blockchain networks have radically different incentive mechanisms to traditional modes of social organization.

Because blockchains are coordination engines. They enable individuals to coordinate on how to deploy their collective resources. This type of mass-coordination of personal resources is unique and will subtly act to profoundly re-distribute the existing power structures of the present.

Why? Blockchains weaken the fundamental value propositions of vertically integrated companies that extract a profit from information asymmetries. Individuals whose skills serve large institutions can more easily decide for themselves how best to apply their skills, without the need for the institution’s support frameworks. As a coordination engine, blockchain networks can efficiently combine the skills and capital required to execute grand ideas, as well as provide a digital market for resulting products.

A global marketplace of programmable money is one with profound information transparency. The ability of independent groups to analyze the market enables great efficiency and reduces information asymmetries. Though, does not delete them entirely.

In short, blockchain networks are pro-competency. They allow individuals to decide for themselves how their skills can best be utilized and deployed, instead of having that decided for them by a control faction. Competent people add value to the network and in doing so, provide another composable brick that others can use in their constructions. The raw incentives create a positive-sum game.

Missing pieces

What are the missing pieces?

The great difficulty in realizing our vision is the limited ability of current blockchains to reach into the real world.

We are not our online avatars. We exist in a physical space and we have physical needs that must be satisfied. We are bound to networks of obligation and responsibility that societies depend upon to maintain social order. We cannot live in an NFT.

The real world matters. Without a way of linking real-world identities to blockchains, the grand cypherpunk vision for blockchain can never be fully realized – only a neutered form of primitive electronic sovereignty.

The new information networks: composable privacy

The new information networks we are building lack a key ingredient: composable privacy.

By using novel cryptography, we can turn blockchains into encrypted ledgers where transactions hide their execution from observers. Identities can be encrypted, but still used to prove statements about the user, and without involving an additional institutional third party. e.g. “I have a U.S. passport”, “I have a digital driving license”, “I have a Twitter account with over 1,000 followers”, “I signed in with a Google account”.

The effect of this is to build trust infrastructure that allows human beings to iteratively build trust between themselves and to do so rapidly and at scale.

Programmable private blockchains stand to usher in a revolution in how distributed systems can be used. Without strong identity guarantees, the only workable governance mechanisms for distributed on-chain organizations are autocracy and plutocracy.

However, if past actions can be uniquely tied to a cryptocurrency account, it is possible to identify key stakeholders and to give them an accelerated role in governance. That enables a much more democratic architecture of governance systems.

Privacy technology is required to turn blockchains into the coordination engines they were always destined to be.

The future we are building does not outright destroy existing systems of control – it breaks them apart and replicates these systems on a smaller scale. Lower barriers to entry lead to greater competition and market fragmentation and act to limit the ability of distributed organizations to consolidate power.

Because coordination engines are pro-competency.

Privacy for the user, transparency for the protocol

There is a phrase I think we will hear much of over the coming years: privacy for the user, transparency for the protocol.

The capabilities of private programmable blockchains and the outcomes they enable are not commonly understood. A private blockchain is not one where all information and data are intrinsically hidden. They are hybrid systems where public and private data coexist. Application designers and users can choose which data is hidden.  

Efficient markets require data transparency. Data relating to identity requires data confidentiality. The solution is applications where information that relates to assets is public, and information relating to users (e.g. who owns said assets) is private.

To create a privacy-preserving ecosystem it must be possible for confidential, transparent, and hybrid applications to directly interact with one another. Privacy is not an aftermarket add-on to be bolted onto a few select applications. Full composability is essential to develop a rich ecosystem.

Composability enables trust-building networks by allowing individuals to put core aspects of themselves on-chain, disclosing it only selectively and enabling distributed protocols to use these capabilities in a composable permissionless manner, without leaking information. Who are you? What have you done? What do you want to do? With privacy, we can disclose this information to smart contracts and hide it from people. These will form core primitives of our new information networks.

I have spent the last 6 years building exactly this, through building Aztec. Crafting the missing ingredient, privacy, via cutting-edge cryptography, zero-knowledge proofs, and raw engineering.  

Values of the new information networks

Networks have values that are independent of their creators. Networks live or die on the quality of their network effects. This incentive gives network participants a shared motivation to expand the network. The more nodes that exist, the greater the value individual nodes can extract from the network. The manner in which the network changes itself to act on these motivations defines its intrinsic values.

What are the intrinsic values of permissionless programmable privacy networks like Aztec? We can derive these from the fundamental value proposition – to expose a rich ecosystem of composable, confidential applications, and to do this as a permissionless, decentralized network. This enables individuals and small groups to compete in industries dominated by large players leveraging large information asymmetries.

Such networks are, at their very core, pro-competency. If you have something useful to add to the network, you can. If you want to use existing network components in your product, go right ahead. No need to ask for permission from the network.

From this starting point we can anticipate the cycles of action and reaction that will drive networks like Aztec to adopt the following values over their lives:

  • They are pro-emergence and pluralistic.
  • They strongly desire individual autonomy and freedom of action.
  • They are fiercely anti-elite, but not necessarily anti-elitism.
  • Finally, they seek to undermine traditional frameworks of control and subjugation used to promote institutional stability.

Blockchain networks grow by harnessing the industry and enterprise of as many human souls as they can get their hands on.  

Without mechanisms of coercion to fall back on, the network must ensure a positive-sum game for network participants who add value. These also happen to be values that I believe I strongly hold. This is not a coincidence. I started in web3 seven years ago building a marketplace for corporate debt on Ethereum and by degrees ended up building a distributed programmable privacy network on Ethereum. This was not due to some grand design but, I think, the cumulative effects of seven years of following my impulses. To find a place of belonging.

This feeling is something you may share – that the frameworks and systems produced by our societies offer none of us a true sense of belonging and purpose. But here, amongst our companions, we have found belonging through building a shared vision of a radical new world.

The road ahead

There is a long road to walk to realize the ambitions of the new information networks. The technology is barely capable and challenging to build. The architecture is novel and challenging to design. Convincing people to build on radical foundations to bootstrap a market is challenging. Building competitive infrastructure and tooling is challenging.

The challenge is irrelevant. We cannot become a generation scorned by our descendants for squandering the opportunity of a lifetime.

We will build and deploy the new information networks and by degrees will learn how to use them to chip away at the inequities of the status quo, and the social order that upholds it.

Equipped with such armaments and driven by our ideals, we will pull our ideas into reality. Together, we will forge our digital Eden.

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Aztec Network
Aztec Network
19 May
xx min read

10 Privacy Features Ethereum Devs Want. All of them live on Aztec.

Last week, PSE published an insightful and comprehensive user-research piece on private transfers on Ethereum. They interviewed 38 teams in the space and asked what's broken, what's missing, what builders wish they had. The list reads like a wishlist of features every privacy app on L1 is currently trying to engineer towards. It's the kind of rigorous, builder-grounded research the privacy ecosystem has needed.

We read the list. It's the list we've been building against for years.

Aztec solves all of these problems. Every requested feature already lives on Aztec. The proving system, the private contract language, the decentralized network, the privacy wallet architecture, the key model, the snark-friendliness: all of Aztec was built against this list before it was a list.

What follows is a walkthrough. For each of PSE's top technical findings, here's the feature builders are asking for, and how it works on Aztec today.

TL;DR

  1. Slow client-side ZK proving: Aztec's client-side proving system (Chonk) is optimized specifically for fast recursive proving on resource-constrained devices such as phones (and even in the browser).
  2. Expensive L1 proof verification: Aztec amortises the gas costs of L1 verification across thousands of users per rollup. Instead of “millions of gas per user” it costs hundreds of gas; that’s pennies per user transaction.
  3. DeFi composability with private state: Private token contracts on Aztec can be unshielded to easily interact with Ethereum DeFi contracts, and the resulting state can be shielded, without leaking who did the interaction. Or you can just design composable private DeFi contracts within Aztec.  
  4. Deposit/withdrawal leakage: Aztec isn’t a basic shielded pool, so users don’t need to keep withdrawing to do useful things. Users can use their funds within private smart contracts. Privacy leakage doesn’t happen if all transaction activity stays in private-land.
  5. No native wallet support: Of course Ethereum wallets don’t natively support privacy; Ethereum doesn’t have native privacy. There are a huge number of new concepts that are needed to design a private smart contract wallet. Aztec wallets are built from the ground up to enable a rich private onchain experience. 
  6. Reliance on external networks, TEEs, FHE, and relayers: The private and public execution environments of Aztec aren't reliant on external networks. Aztec is a fully decentralised L2, without these centralisation concerns. 
  7. Keccak is inefficient inside ZK circuits: The entire Aztec protocol uses Poseidon2, so complex private txs are rapid to prove on a phone. 
  8. Slow private state sync: Brute-force scanning of the entire chain’s history is not necessary. Aztec's tagging scheme lets recipients pinpoint their notes in seconds from a shared secret.
  9. Fragmented privacy sets: All private smart contracts on Aztec share one global note tree and one global nullifier tree. All network activity contributes to and draws from a single privacy set.
  10. No tooling or standards for private contracts: Aztec has a huge suite of tools to ship private contracts. Noir, a smart contract framework, a private state manager, a keystore, the PXE for executing contracts locally, a JS SDK, testing frameworks, local test networks, a CLI, and a slew of advanced private contract standards.

1. ZK proof generation time on user devices

Ethereum Problem: Proof generation is too slow on user devices, especially mobile. Elliptic-curve pairing operations are a specific bottleneck. Server-side proving is a censorship and privacy leak vector. Sub-second proving was the stated threshold.

Aztec solution: Proving on Aztec runs locally in the PXE (Private eXecution Environment, pronounced "pixie"), so no data ever leaves the user's device. Chonk, our client-side zk proving system, is ruthlessly optimised for fast recursive proving on low-memory devices like phones, native and in-browser. Years of optimization have already gone in, and we're still finding more. It’s best in class and we haven’t even merged-in GPU acceleration yet!

The slow pairing checks that PSE's interviewees called out as a bottleneck aren’t a problem with Aztec; pairings are simply batched together and deferred away from the user's device, handled by the more powerful network instead, without leaking any information. With such a powerful local prover, there’s little need to outsource proving to an untrusted party.

2. ZK proof verification gas on L1

Ethereum Problem: Verifying a ZK proof on Ethereum is prohibitively expensive. A Groth16 proof for a private transfer costs several hundred thousand L1 gas. A Halo2 (KZG Plonk) proof can cost approximately one million gas

Aztec solution: Aztec amortises L1 verification gas across all transactions in the rollup. At current network throughput, that cost is split across roughly 2,000 users per proof. Later this year, it’s slated to be split across ~20,000. Rollup costs are also partially subsidised by Aztec block rewards.

Net result: hundreds of L1 gas per user instead of millions. Plus cheap L2 gas. The user pays pennies for an Aztec transaction.

3. DeFi composability with private state

Ethereum Problem: Wrapping and unwrapping tokens leaks privacy and breaks composability. Smart contracts can't easily interact with encrypted balances. Private state is isolated; contract state is normally shared.

Aztec solution: Private state is not isolated on Aztec. The private state of one contract can be composed with that of another. This can unlock new privacy-preserving DeFi patterns directly on Aztec.

A single private transaction can call a stack of private functions across multiple contracts, with private inputs, private state transitions, and privacy over which functions were even executed and how many. Observers see that a transaction landed. They do not see what happened inside it. Stew on that for a second: a call stack of nested private functions across contracts written by different developers, each causing state transitions, all completely private.

Aztec also runs public functions, similar to Ethereum, inside the same smart contract, so you can build existing DeFi primitives on Aztec

For Ethereum DeFi specifically, Aztec has a tidy L1-to-L2 messaging layer. Private balances can be unshielded to interact with L1 protocols and shielded back, without leaking who did the interaction and without leaky public gas payments. And for private DeFi primitives that need genuinely shared private state (state nobody knows the value of, but which anyone can mutate), people have built Aztec contracts that compose conventional Aztec private state with co-snark or FHE sidecars.

Private and public state are peers inside a single Aztec smart contract. Builders mix and match.

4. Deposit/withdrawal privacy leakage

Ethereum Problem: Entry and exit points are the dominant privacy leak, not the protocol itself. Depositing and quickly withdrawing makes identity analysis trivial.

Aztec solution: The main fix is to stop crossing the boundary so often. (Or even if you do cross the boundary, Aztec has leakage protections).

Imagine if thousands of private smart contracts lived on the same network and could call each other without leaking which contracts were called, which arguments were passed, or what was returned. Imagine they all shared one global note tree and one global nullifier tree. That's Aztec. Once funds are inside, users don't need to keep crossing the private/public boundary to do useful things: Aztec is its own rich environment for composable, private execution of smart contracts.

Even when a private function does need to call a public function – be it an L1 DeFi contract, or a native public function within Aztec – the developer controls the information they reveal; not the protocol. The call can even be "incognito" to hide msg_sender. A single environment for many private apps to thrive also means re-usable tooling for builders.

5. Lack of native wallet support

Ethereum Problem: Privacy features (per-dapp addresses, private transfers) aren't natively integrated into major wallets. Reliance on dapp-specific UIs damages UX.

Aztec solution: Ethereum wallets weren't built for any of this, and they don't need to be: the chain underneath them has no private state to protect. Aztec wallets are an entirely new category of software.

Aztec wallets are able to manage all these new privacy-centric concepts:

  • Authorize your transactions however you want, without revealing your identity to the world. Native account abstraction lets you choose any auth scheme you like, and that choice doesn't expose who you are.
  • Hold multiple specialized privacy keys. Distinct nullifier, viewing, and efficient message-signing keys.
  • Keep your full private state on your own device. An encrypted local database holds your notes and nullifiers (siloed by private contract address), along with private data, private messages, shared secrets, and private contract bytecode.
  • Fine-grained contract access control for your private data.. Access permissions for contracts to read your private data are granular and revocable, rather than all-or-nothing.
  • Run private contracts without cross-contract interference. Built-in protections can stop malicious private contracts from reading or manipulating the private state of other contracts.
  • Establish shared secrets with your counterparties. Wallets can support both on-chain and off-chain methods for setting these up.
  • Catch privacy leaks before you sign. Pre-flight transaction privacy analysis warns when your data might be leaked via public args, msg_sender, fee payment, or even through the shape of the tx.
  • Make your tx look like every other tx on the network. Random padding is added to notes, nullifiers, and logs, and gas settings, anchor blocks, and inclusion deadlines are randomized so every tx blends in with the crowd.
  • Submit transactions privately to the network. Txns can be submitted to the network through a private submission path.
  • Pay fees through generic private fee paymasters. This gives users convenience and enables experimentation over the best private token contract designs for different use cases.
  • Use your wallet to gatekeep which frontends can access which private data . Apps shouldn’t have unfettered access to everything; a wallet needs to protect users’ private data..
  • Get post-quantum hygiene warnings. Wallets are able to flag risky patterns around address reuse and ephemeral-key broadcasts.

Aztec wallets are in active development, and this is an area where we expect many teams to build different wallets that are customized to various user needs. An early wallet is already baked into the protocol for developers to start using today. 

6. Reliance on relayers, FHE coprocessors, and TEEs

Ethereum Problem: Encrypted tokens and many privacy protocols depend on external networks for encryption, decryption, or relaying. Threshold-decryption committees and TEE hardware vendors are added trust assumptions on top of the chain itself.

Aztec solution: Aztec's private and public execution environments are not reliant on external networks. Aztec is its own decentralised network: ~4,000 validators stake on it, block proposers are randomly selected, a random committee attests, and a decentralised set of provers proves the rollup's execution. Validity is ultimately backed by cryptographic proofs settled on Ethereum.

External networks (co-snark networks, TEEs, MPC or FHE sidecars) become an opt-in choice for the specific case of private shared state. The trust tradeoffs there are something the contract developer signs up for explicitly, not a tax every user pays on every transaction by default.

7. Hash function inefficiency inside ZK circuits

Ethereum Problem: Keccak is inefficient to prove inside ZK circuits. There is no native support for a ZK-friendly hash like Poseidon.

Aztec solution: Poseidon2 is enshrined across the entire Aztec protocol, for rapid proving of every tx. Every Aztec state tree, the proving system, the innards of the protocol; everywhere. Reading and writing state inside a circuit is as cheap as it gets.

Keccak, SHA, and Blake hashes are still available through optimised Noir libraries when contracts need them for L1 interoperability. The default is ZK-friendly; the L1-friendly hashes are there when you reach for them.

8. Private state synchronisation

Ethereum Problem: Syncing private state (scanning for incoming notes and events) is a client-side bottleneck. Users wait for scans to complete before seeing their balance. Tachyon-style oblivious sync was cited as a path forward.

Aztec solution: Brute-force syncing of private state is rarely needed. Most real-world use cases involve a sender and recipient who can establish a shared secret offchain first.

From that shared secret, both parties can derive a sequence of random-looking “tags”. Each encrypted note log is prepended with the next tag in the sequence. The recipient already knows the next tag, so they know exactly what to query. Note discovery happens in seconds, not minutes. The scheme slots cleanly into PIR or mixnet approaches for extra privacy on the query itself, and smart contracts that don't trust senders to use the correct tag can just constrain it inside the circuit.

That’s not to say that Aztec requires interactivity between all senders and recipients. For genuinely non-interactive use cases (recipient can't talk to the sender before the transfer), Aztec enables devs to customize both their log emission and their note-discovery logic however they like. (Aztec also has ways to speed up the brute-force scanning approach from "scan the whole chain" to "scan a tiny subset of non-interactive handshake txs"

9. Fragmented privacy sets

Ethereum Problem: Shielded pools are fragmented across dapps and chains, reducing the effective privacy set for all users. Each new privacy protocol must bootstrap its own.

Aztec solution: There is one global note tree and one global nullifier tree on Aztec, shared by every smart contract on the network. Every private app contributes to and draws from the same privacy set. No per-app bootstrap. No walled gardens.

Private payments, private swaps, lending, payroll, treasury, identity attestations: all of them land in the same global commitment set, by construction.

10. Tooling and standards for private contracts

Ethereum Problem: Ethereum developer tooling lacks support for private transfers and private state. Standards for private tokens, compliance, and wallet interactions are missing. Many privacy teams are small, with short runway and expensive audits.

Aztec solution: Aztec ships the full toolchain for private contracts: Noir for writing private logic, the Aztec smart contract framework with macros that hide the protocol mess so devs can focus on app logic, the PXE for keys / state / syncing / proof generation, a JS SDK, a local node for testing, a CLI, and a real, live, decentralised L2.

The mental overhead of building a privacy protocol on Aztec collapses to "just write the app logic." Here is an example of a complete private transfer function on Aztec:

#[authorize_once("from", "authwit_nonce")]
#[external("private")]

fn transfer_in_private(from: AztecAddress, to: AztecAddress, amount: u128, authwit_nonce: Field) {
    self.storage.balances.at(from).sub(amount).deliver(MessageDelivery.ONCHAIN_CONSTRAINED);
    self.storage.balances.at(to).add(amount).deliver(MessageDelivery.ONCHAIN_CONSTRAINED);
}

Look at how simple that is.

A two-line function body.

Two lines.

Aztec takes care of the rest.

Behind those #[...] macros, the framework handles: caller authorisation, note syncing, fetching notes from the user's private db, Merkle membership proofs against the global note tree, safe nullifier creation (without leaking master secrets to the circuit), randomness for new notes, encrypted ciphertext generation, log tagging for fast recipient discovery, and public-input population. The PXE handles key management, private state, and proof generation. The smart contract itself contains its own message-processing logic for log discovery, decryption, and storage on the recipient side.

If you want whitelists, blacklists, association sets, custom tx authorisation, viewing-key hierarchies, temporary view access, selective disclosure to specific counterparties, just import a Noir library. Want something more adventurous than private payments? Same toolchain. 

What this adds up to

PSE's findings are not ten unrelated bugs. They're the same problem refracted ten ways: privacy retrofitted onto a chain that was not designed for it yields bad tradeoffs. 

Aztec was designed against this list before it was a list. One global note tree and one global nullifier tree. Private and public state inside the same contract. Compose calls between private contracts without leaking anything. Fast client-side proving on phones via Chonk. Snark-friendliness everywhere. Rollup-amortised L1 gas costs, fractions of a cent per user. Native account abstraction with private fee paymasters. No painfully slow private state syncing: a tagging-based note discovery scheme that runs in seconds. An entirely new category of wallet that treats privacy as a first-class concern. Simple, high-level smart contract syntax that collapses a basic private token transfer function into two lines.

There were 10 privacy features Ethereum devs wanted, all of them live on Aztec. The infrastructure is in place. Build the thing.

Go to our docs to start building

Aztec is the blockchain that solved the privacy problem. Start at docs.aztec.network or read the architecture deep-dive on The Best of Both Worlds: How Aztec Blends Private and Public State.

Aztec Network
Aztec Network
31 Mar
xx min read

Announcing the Alpha Network

Alpha is live: a fully feature-complete, privacy-first network. The infrastructure is in place, privacy is native to the protocol, and developers can now build truly private applications. 

Nine years ago, we set out to redesign blockchain for privacy. The goal: create a system institutions can adopt while giving users true control of their digital lives. Privacy band-aids are coming to Ethereum (someday), but it’s clear we need privacy now, and there’s an arms race underway to build it. Privacy is complex, it’s not a feature you can bolt-on as an afterthought. It demands a ground-up approach, deep tech stack integration, and complete decentralization.

In November 2025, the Aztec Ignition Chain went live as the first decentralized L2 on Ethereum, it’s the coordination layer that the execution layer sits on top of. The network is not operated by the Aztec Labs or the Aztec Foundation, it’s run by the community, making it the true backbone of Aztec. 

With the infrastructure in place and a unanimous community vote, the network enters Alpha. 

What is the Alpha Network?

Alpha is the first Layer 2 with a full execution environment for private smart contracts. All accounts, transactions, and the execution itself can be completely private. Developers can now choose what they want public and what they want to keep private while building with the three privacy pillars we have in place across data, identity, and compute.

These privacy pillars, which can be used individually or combined, break down into three core layers: 

  1. Data: The data you hold or send remains private, enabling use cases such as private transactions, RWAs, payments and stablecoins.
  2. Identity: Your identity remains private, enabling accounts that privately connect real world identities onchain, institutional compliance, or financial reporting where users selectively disclose information.
  3. Compute: The actions you take remain private, enabling applications in private finance, gaming, and beyond.

The Key Components  

Alpha is feature complete–meaning this is the only full-stack solution for adding privacy to your business or application. You build, and Aztec handles the cryptography under the hood. 

It’s Composable. Private-preserving contracts are not isolated; they can talk to each other and seamlessly blend both private and public state across contracts. Privacy can be preserved across contract calls for full callstack privacy. 

No backdoor access. Aztec is the only decentralized L2, and is launching as a fully decentralized rollup with a Layer 1 escape hatch.

It’s Compliant. Companies are missing out on the benefits of blockchains because transparent chains expose user data, while private networks protect it, but still offer fully customizable controls. Now they can build compliant apps that move value around the world instantly.

How Apps Work on Alpha 

  1. Write in Noir, an open-source Rust-like programming language for writing smart contracts. Build contracts with Aztec.nr and mark functions private or public.
  1. Prove on a device. Users execute private logic locally and a ZK proof is generated.
  1. Submit to Aztec. The proof goes to sequencers who validate without seeing the data. Any public aspects are then executed.
  1. Settle on Ethereum. Proofs of transactions on Aztec are settled to Ethereum L1.

Developers can explore our privacy primitives across data, identity, and compute and start building with them using the documentation here. Note that this is an early version of the network with known vulnerabilities, see this post for details. While this is the first iteration of the network, there will be several upgrades that secure and harden the network on our path to Beta. If you’d like to learn more about how you can integrate privacy into your project, reach out here

To hear directly from our Cofounders, join our live from Cannes Q&A on Tuesday, March 31st at 9:30 am ET. Follow us on X to get the latest updates from the Aztec Network.

Aztec Network
Aztec Network
27 Mar
xx min read

Critical Vulnerability in Alpha v4

On Wednesday 17 March 2026 our team discovered a new vulnerability in the Aztec Network. Following the analysis, the vulnerability has been confirmed as a critical vulnerability in accordance with our vulnerability matrix.

The vulnerability affects the proving system as a whole, and is not mitigated via public re-execution by the committee of validators. Exploitation can lead to severe disruption of the protocol and theft of user funds.

In accordance with our policy, fixes for the network will be packaged and distributed with the “v5” release of the network, currently planned for July 2026.

The actual bug and corresponding patch will not be publicly disclosed until “v5.”

Aztec applications and portals bridging assets from Layer 1s should warn users about the security guarantees of Alpha, in particular, reminding users not to put in funds they are not willing to lose. Portals or applications may add additional security measures or training wheels specific to their application or use case.

State of Alpha security

We will shortly establish a bug tracker to show the number and severity of bugs known to us in v4. The tracker will be updated as audits and security researchers discover issues. Each new alpha release will get its own tracker. This will allow developers and users to judge for themselves how they are willing to use the network, and we will use the tracker as a primary determinant for whether the network is ready for a "Beta" label.

Additional bug disclosure

We have identified a vulnerability in barretenberg allowing inclusion of incorrect proofs in the Aztec Network mempool, and ask all nodes to upgrade to versions v.4.1.2 or later.

We’d like to thank Consensys Diligence & TU Vienna for a recent discovery of a separate vulnerability in barretenberg categorized as medium for the network and critical for Noir:

We have published a fixed version of barretenberg.

We’d also like to thank Plainshift AI for discovery, reproduction, and reporting of one more vulnerability in the Aztec Network and their ongoing work to help secure the network.

Aztec Network
Aztec Network
18 Mar
xx min read

How Aztec Governance Works

Decentralization is not just a technical property of the Aztec Network, it is the governing principle. 

No single team, company, or individual controls how the network evolves. Upgrades are proposed in public, debated in the open, and approved by the people running the network. Decentralized sequencing, proving, and governance are hard-coded into the base protocol so that no central actor can unilaterally change the rules, censor transactions, or appropriate user value.

The governance framework that makes this possible has three moving parts: Aztec Improvement Proposal (AZIP), Aztec Upgrade Proposal (AZUP), and the onchain vote. Together, they form a pipeline that takes an idea to a live protocol change, with multiple independent checkpoints along the way.

The Virtual Town Square

Every upgrade starts with an AZIP. AZIPs are version-controlled design documents, publicly maintained on GitHub, modeled on the same EIP process that has governed Ethereum since its earliest days. Anyone is encouraged to suggest improvements to the Aztec Network protocol spec.

Before a formal proposal is opened, ideas live in GitHub Discussions, an open forum where the community can weigh in, challenge assumptions, and shape the direction of a proposal before it hardens into a spec. This is the virtual town square: the place where the network's future gets debated in public, not decided behind closed doors.

The AZIP framework is what decentralization looks like in practice. Multiple ideas can surface simultaneously, get stress-tested by the community, and the strongest ones naturally rise. Good arguments win, not titles or seniority. The process selects for quality discussion precisely because anyone can participate and everything is visible.

Once an AZIP is formalized as a pull request, it enters a structured lifecycle: Draft, Ready for Discussion, then Accepted or Rejected. Rejected AZIPs are not deleted — they remain permanently in the repository as a record of what was tried and why it was rejected. Nothing gets quietly buried.

Security Considerations are mandatory for all Core, Standard, and Economics AZIPs. Proposals without them cannot pass the Draft stage. Security is structural, not an afterthought.

From Proposal to Upgrade

Once Core Contributors, a merit-based and informal group of active protocol contributors, have reviewed an AZIP and approved it for inclusion, it gets bundled into an AZUP.

An AZUP takes everything an AZIP described and deploys it — a real smart contract, real onchain actions. Each AZUP includes a payload that encodes the exact onchain changes that will occur if the upgrade is approved. Anyone can inspect the payload on a block explorer and see precisely what will change before voting begins.

The payload then goes to sequencers for signaling. Sequencers are the backbone of the network. They propose blocks, attest to state, and serve as the first governance gate for any upgrade. A payload must accumulate enough signals from sequencers within a fixed round to advance. The people actually running the network have to express coordinated support before any change reaches a broader vote.

Once sequencers signal quorum, the proposal moves to tokenholders. Sequencers' staked voting power defaults to "yea" on proposals that came through the signaling path, meaning opposition must be active, not passive. Any sequencer or tokenholder who wants to vote against a proposal must explicitly re-delegate their stake before the voting snapshot is taken. The system rewards genuine engagement from all sides.

For a proposal to pass, it must meet quorum, a supermajority margin, and a minimum participation threshold, all three. If any condition is unmet, the proposal fails.

Built-In Delays, Built-In Safety

Even after a proposal passes, it does not execute immediately. A mandatory delay gives node operators time to deploy updated software, allows the community to perform final checks, and reduces the risk of sudden uncoordinated changes hitting the network. If the proposal is not executed within its grace period, it expires.

Failed AZUPs cannot be resubmitted. A new proposal must be created that directly addresses the feedback received. There is no way to simply retry and hope for a different result.

No Single Point of Control

The teams building the network have no special governance power. Sequencers, tokenholders, and Core Contributors are the governing actors, each playing a distinct and non-redundant role.

No single party can force or block an upgrade. Sequencers can withhold signals. Tokenholders can vote nay. Proposals not executed within the grace period expire on their own.

This is decentralization working as intended. The network upgrades not because a team decides it should, but because the people running it agree that it should.

If you want to help shape what Aztec becomes, the forum is open. The proposals are public. The town square is yours. 

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