One underrated thing about Fhenix:
developers don’t need to become cryptography experts to build confidential apps.
That probably matters more than the tech itself.
Good infrastructure disappears into the developer experience.
@fhenix@RedactMoney
it’s probably more about autonomous systems coordinating, executing, and interacting directly onchain without relying on constant human input.
that requires very different infrastructure.
Most blockchains force you to choose between transparency and privacy.
Fhenix is trying to change that equation entirely with encrypted computation.
Feels like one of those infrastructure shifts people ignore until it suddenly becomes obvious.
@fhenix@RedactMoney
most AI x crypto projects still feel like traditional blockchains with AI layered on top.
the reason @ritualfnd caught my attention is because the project seems focused on changing the execution layer itself around autonomous systems, inference, and coordination.
The crazy thing about FHE is that data can stay encrypted even while being processed.
Not before. Not after.
During computation itself.
That’s the part of Fhenix that feels way bigger than most people realize.
@fhenix@RedactMoney
one underrated thing about @ritualfnd:
the project actually seems designed around the idea that autonomous systems will eventually interact with each other directly onchain
I think the best privacy tech eventually becomes invisible.
Users shouldn’t have to think about protecting their data every second.
That’s why the direction Fhenix is taking feels interesting to me.
@fhenix@RedactMoney
you can usually tell which teams actually think deeply about infrastructure.
they spend less time talking about “AI” itself
and more time talking about execution, coordination, integrity, and compute.
@ritualfnd
Most projects talk about transparency.
Very few talk about what it costs.
Once you start reading about FHE, the whole conversation around privacy in smart contracts starts to look different.
@fhenix@RedactMoney
crypto keeps trying to bolt AI onto architectures that were never designed for it.
eventually someone was going to rebuild the stack from the ground up.
feels like @ritualfnd understands that.