Fairblock is rethinking how privacy works on public blockchains.
Most systems keep data private by putting someone in the middle. A company, an operator, or a special server that can see everything and control who gets access. That works in some cases, but it creates a single point of failure. If that system is hacked, pressured, or makes a mistake, the privacy breaks.
Instead of depending on one trusted middle layer, Fairblock spreads responsibility across a decentralized network of participants and uses threshold cryptography so no single person can unlock the data alone. Sensitive details like
→ Transactions.
→ Amounts
→ Or who you’re dealing with gets encrypted right from the start. They stay hidden by default and can only be revealed when specific conditions set on-chain are met. No single person or company automatically sees everything.
This isn’t about hiding everything forever. Real businesses still need oversight and accountability. So Fairblock only reveals information when it’s truly needed for audits, compliance checks, or governance. And only under clear, predefined rules. Never with full access.
The main idea is simple: privacy shouldn’t depend on trusting a middle layer or middleman. It should be built directly into the protocol using cryptography.
If you want to build or run on public blockchains without exposing sensitive business data at every step, while still being able to share what’s needed when it matters, @0xfairblock is focused on solving that problem.
The biggest criticism I’m seeing re: @tempo zones is that it’s not true privacy bc the operator can see all tx details ie it’s not fully trustless. Fair, it’s not going to be a catch all for all use cases
Our target customers are Enterprises and Banks. You’re out of your mind if you think those types of users will want a solution without auditability. Gotta be pragmatic about meeting your users where they are
@guynextdooooor@RialoHQ@rialo_africa This is useful because most subscription losses happen silently. A system that checks before payment would fix that.