Crypto攻城狮丨LionⓂ️Ⓜ️T
Crypto攻城狮丨LionⓂ️Ⓜ️T|Oct 19, 2025 14:29
Recently, I’ve been feeling more and more that the real bottleneck of blockchain isn’t consensus or performance—it’s the transparency of the 'trust layer.' Most projects claim to be 'open and verifiable,' but when you ask how incentives are calculated, who verifies the data, or how rewards are distributed, they’re completely clueless. The result? Users don’t trust the projects, and projects don’t dare to delegate authority. Over the past few days, I’ve noticed some interesting moves from @brevis_zk. Their zk Coprocessor and Pico Prism system can already achieve near real-time verification on the Ethereum mainnet. It only takes a few seconds to verify a block, and they’ve slashed hardware costs by half. The devs believe this isn’t just a performance breakthrough—it’s a reconstruction of the trust structure. When verification becomes faster, cheaper, and more open, 'transparency' finally becomes a technical capability, not just a marketing slogan. What’s even cooler is their recently launched The Proving Grounds incentive program, which doesn’t follow the old playbook. It’s not just simple tasks + airdrops. Instead, community members can accumulate Sparks points through 'verifiable contributions.' From content creation and interactions to subsequent on-chain actions, everything can be proven, recorded, and recognized. The devs believe this is the true logic of 'fair participation'—what you do doesn’t need explaining; the system itself will prove your worth. If the last wave of Web3 was driven by 'hype,' then the next wave will definitely be driven by 'verifiable trust.' Brevis is turning this vision into reality. The devs think: In this era, real trust isn’t about who you believe—it’s about being able to verify everything.
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