At ETHSeoul, Ethereum Developers Turn Attention to Privacy and Users

At ETHSeoul, Ethereum Developers Turn Attention to Privacy and Users

Ethereum developers turned their attention to privacy solutions, scalability and enhanced user-friendliness as the bunch gathered at an expensive building in Seoul’s Gangnam business district for ETHSeoul 2022, a technical conference focused on the second-largest blockchain.

White tees and gaming laptops were everywhere as enthusiasts cheered on Ethereum cofounder Vitalik Buterin, who took the stage to kickstart the event that ran Aug. 5-7.

Buterin cited zero-knowledge (zk) proofs and Soulbound tokens as major developments within the Ethereum ecosystem that could provide better privacy, security, and real-world use cases for users.


“With zk proofs, you can prove you are a human without revealing it. You can also have reputation systems where you can prove you have done or did not do something,” he said.

“With Soulbound tokens, which are non-transferable, you can prevent dumping and unequal allocations, leading to better governance and fairer token distributions,” Buterin added, referring to the parts of the crypto world filled with opportunistic developers and rug pulls.
 

That was a view shared by Janmajaya Mall and Barry Whitehat from the privacy and scaling team for the Ethereum Foundation.

Mall and Whitehat said the concept of off-chain microtransactions, or transfers of small tokens outside of a network, was a way to expand scalability for blockchain users.
 

At the same time, zk proofs improved the privacy aspect. Nik Kunkel, developer at Ethereum lending and borrowing platform MakerDAO,

summarized the problems and concerns brought about by the lack of transparency and actions of centralized institutions such as Celsius, BlockFi and Voyager introduced the concept of community consortiums.
 

“Essentially, you want to onboard everybody in the community and every stakeholder to get consensus,” Kunkel said. “You are essentially betting that the entire community isn’t going to murder itself.”

Rahat Chowdhury, an engineer at blockchain network Polygon, emphasized the importance of security and user experience for achieving mass adoption.
 

“People in the space understand gas fees and why we need them, but those who aren’t native to Web3 don’t get it and don’t want to,” Rahat said. “We need to make apps more inviting to people that aren’t native to Web3 if we achieve mass adoption.”

Michael Blank, COO of network developer Polygon Studios, spoke on the challenges of bringing Web3 to the masses.

“We need to ask ourselves what additional value the technology provides to the one before it, how easy it is to enter and engage users, and how many repeat users there are,” Blank said.

The Ethereum Foundation’s Aqeel Mohammad expressed the need for more proof-of-stake validator nodes to be established in Korea and Asia to fulfil the decentralisation aims. Currently, the majority are in Europe and the U.S. - coindesk

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