• About
  • FAQ
  • Earn Bitcoin while Surfing the net
  • Buy & Sell Crypto on Paxful
Newsletter
Approx Foundation
  • Home
    • Home – Layout 1
  • Bitcoin
  • Ethereum
  • Regulation
  • Market
  • Blockchain
  • Business
  • Guide
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
    • Home – Layout 1
  • Bitcoin
  • Ethereum
  • Regulation
  • Market
  • Blockchain
  • Business
  • Guide
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Approx Foundation
No Result
View All Result
Home Regulation

Shipping an L1 zkEVM #2: The Security Foundations

Moussa by Moussa
December 19, 2025
in Regulation
0
The Future of Ethereum’s State
189
SHARES
1.5k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Related articles

As quantum ‘Q-Day’ jumps to 2029, Ethereum faces a new fight over what to do with coins left in old wallets

As quantum ‘Q-Day’ jumps to 2029, Ethereum faces a new fight over what to do with coins left in old wallets

March 26, 2026
How L1 and L2s can build the strongest possible Ethereum

How L1 and L2s can build the strongest possible Ethereum

March 23, 2026


Thanks to Arantxa Zapico, Benedikt Wagner, and Dmitry Khovratovich from the EF cryptography team for their contributions, and to Ladislaus, Kev, Alex, and Marius for the careful review and feedback.


The zkEVM ecosystem has been sprinting for a year. And it worked! We crossed the finish line for real-time proving!

Now comes the next phase: building something mainnet-grade.

From speed to security

In July, we published a north-star definition for realtime proving. Nine months later, the ecosystem crushed it: proving latency dropped from 16 minutes to 16 seconds, costs collapsed 45×, and zkVMs now prove 99% of all Ethereum blocks in under 10 seconds on target hardware.

While the major performance bottlenecks have been cleared by the zkEVM teams, security still remains the elephant in the room.

The case for 128-bit provable security

Many STARK-based zkEVMs today rely on unproven mathematical conjectures to hit their security targets. Over the past months, STARK security has been going through a lot, with foundational conjectures getting mathematically disproven by researchers. Each conjecture that falls takes bits of security with it: what was advertised as 100 bits might actually be 80.

The only reasonable path forward is provable security, and 128 bits remains the target. It’s the security level recommended by standardization bodies and validated by real-world computational milestones.

For zkEVMs, this isn’t academic. A soundness issue is not like other security issues. If an attacker can forge a proof, they can forge anything: mint tokens from nothing, rewrite state, steal funds. For an L1 zkEVM securing hundreds of billions of dollars, the security margin is not negotiable.

Three Milestones

For us, security and proof size are both critical—but they’re also in tension. More security typically means larger proofs, and proofs must stay small enough to propagate across Ethereum’s P2P network reliably and in time.

We are setting three milestones:

Milestone 1: soundcalc integration Deadline: End of February 2026

To measure security consistently, we created soundcalc: a tool that estimates zkVM security based on the latest cryptographic security bounds and proof system parameters. It’s a living tool and we plan to keep integrating the latest research and known attacks.

By this deadline, participating zkEVM teams should have their proof system components and all of their circuits integrated with soundcalc. This gives us a common ground for the security assessments that follow. (For reference, see examples of previous integrations: #1, #2)

Milestone 2: Glamsterdam Deadline: End of May 2026

  • 100-bit provable security (as estimated by soundcalc)
  • Final proof size ≤ 600 KiB
  • Compact description of recursion architecture and sketch of its soundness

Milestone 3: H-star Deadline: End of 2026

  • 128-bit provable security (as estimated by soundcalc)
  • Final proof size ≤ 300 KiB
  • Formal security argument for the soundness of the recursion architecture

Recent cryptographic and engineering advances make hitting the above milestones tractable: compact polynomial commitment schemes like WHIR, techniques like JaggedPCS, a bit of grinding, and a well-structured recursion topology can all contribute to a viable path forward.

Recursion is particularly worth highlighting. Modern zkEVMs involve many circuits composed with recursion in custom ways, with lots of glue in between. Each team does it differently. Documenting this architecture and its soundness is essential for the security of the entire system.

The path forward

There’s a strategic reason to lock in on zkEVM security now.

Securing a moving target is hard. Once teams have hit these targets and zkVM architectures stabilize, the formal verification work we’ve been investing in can reach its full potential. By H-star, we hope the proof system layer will have mostly settled. Not frozen forever, but stable enough to formally verify critical components, finalize security proofs, and write specifications that match deployed code.

This is the foundation that is required to get to secure L1 zkEVMs.

Building foundations

A year ago, the question was whether zkEVMs could prove fast enough. That question is answered. The new question is whether they can prove soundly enough. We are confident they can.

On our end:

  • In January, we’ll publish a post clarifying and formalizing the milestones above.
  • We will follow up with a technical post outlining proof system techniques for reaching the security and proof size targets.
  • At the same time, we will be updating Ethproofs to reflect this shift: highlighting security alongside performance.
  • We are here to help throughout this process. Reach out to the EF cryptography team.

The performance sprint is over. Now let’s strengthen the foundations.



Source link

Share76Tweet47

Related Posts

As quantum ‘Q-Day’ jumps to 2029, Ethereum faces a new fight over what to do with coins left in old wallets

As quantum ‘Q-Day’ jumps to 2029, Ethereum faces a new fight over what to do with coins left in old wallets

by Moussa
March 26, 2026
0

The crypto industry has framed its quantum reckoning as a single catastrophic “Q-Day” moment when a sufficiently powerful machine arrives,...

How L1 and L2s can build the strongest possible Ethereum

How L1 and L2s can build the strongest possible Ethereum

by Moussa
March 23, 2026
0

The North Star of the Platform team is for Ethereum to scale as a cohesive system and enable confident adoption...

Ethereum gains ground over Bitcoin amid rising US-Iran war

Ethereum gains ground over Bitcoin amid rising US-Iran war

by Moussa
March 18, 2026
0

Ethereum is outpacing Bitcoin as tensions involving the United States, Israel, and Iran continue to shape global markets.Data from CryptoSlate...

The DAO dream is over? Billion dollar crypto company shuts down, kills token launch citing ‘no users’

The DAO dream is over? Billion dollar crypto company shuts down, kills token launch citing ‘no users’

by Moussa
March 18, 2026
0

Crypto governance company, Tally, processed more than $1 billion in payments, served more than a million users, helped secure over...

Miss this warning and you too could lose 99.9% in one swap while Ethereum bots walk away with the rest

Miss this warning and you too could lose 99.9% in one swap while Ethereum bots walk away with the rest

by Moussa
March 13, 2026
0

A crypto trader lost over $50 million in Aave-wrapped USDT on March 12 after sending a single large order through...

Load More

youssufi.com

sephina.com

[vc_row full_width="stretch_row" parallax="content-moving" vc_row_background="" background_repeat="no-repeat" background_position="center center" footer_scheme="dark" css=".vc_custom_1517813231908{padding-top: 60px !important;padding-bottom: 30px !important;background-color: #191818 !important;background-position: center;background-repeat: no-repeat !important;background-size: cover !important;}" footer_widget_title_color="#fcbf46" footer_button_bg="#fcb11e"][vc_column width="1/4"]

We bring you the latest in Crypto News

[/vc_column][vc_column width="1/4"][vc_wp_categories]
[/vc_column][vc_column width="1/4"][vc_wp_tagcloud taxonomy="post_tag"][/vc_column][vc_column width="1/4"]

Newsletter

[vc_raw_html]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[/vc_raw_html][/vc_column][/vc_row]
No Result
View All Result
  • Contact Us
  • Homepages
  • Business
  • Guide

© 2024 APPROX FOUNDATION - The Crypto Currency News