Welcome back to Marketmovers, the opening bell.
While institutions are realizing privacy is essential infrastructure for blockchain as well as digital asset strategies and not an optional feature.
While the key dynamic is the institutional privacy paradox.
Big firms need transparency for regulatory compliance but must protect competitive data as well as trading flows and.
Positions and they are deploying core privacy enhancing technology like zero knowledge proofs which prove financial statements are true about revealing underlying data, but they don't want anonymous transactions.
They want programmable privacy that satisfies anti-money laundering compliance.
Now officially opened its privacy preserving wallet to the.
Solana, powered by ArchaeM's encrypted engine, bringing incognito mode to everyday transactions.
Well joining me here at the New York Stock Exchange is Yannik Schrade, co-founder and CEO of Arcium.
Yannik, great to have you here.
Thank you so much for joining me.
Thanks for having me.
Well first and foremost, where do you stand when it comes to privacy and why?
So I personally take the most ultimate cypherpunk position there is, which is absolute privacy, privacy guaranteed by mathematics, by cryptography, and all of that.
Enriching decentralized networks to enable financial privacy for individuals but also as you mentioned for institutional users, right, and I think that we are currently at a point where we can feel that both retail users and institutionals all seek privacy, all have come to this realization that crypto and blockchains need to be private in order to Find this kind of adoption that we are all looking forward to in the future, you and I were sitting here on the trading floor of the New York Stock Exchange, and when it comes to the digital asset space, it goes without saying that institutional adoption has already happened.
And given the fact that we are coming off a digital asset summit here in New York City, give us an idea of what the temperature is like right now.
Yes, I think it's interesting, especially looking at institutional adoption of crypto and the overall sentiment also on the retail space when it comes to crypto, and I think they're both currently diverging where when we looked at last week's digital asset summit, we saw a lot of institutionals, a lot of energy.
Which I personally did not expect from the entire market sentiment that we saw in the last few months and weeks.
So I think we're moving in the right direction, but personally I think what is important to keep in mind with all of this institutional adoption coming is to not forget.
The underlying principles on top of which these kinds of networks have been built, and one of them is privacy, right, building actually secure cryptographic privacy primitives and not going the shortcut routes of building networks that rely on trusted single points of failure.
So on one hand, as you mentioned, privacy is something that we are all concerned about, but there's also compliance, especially when it comes to the financial sector within the US.
So what do you think needs to happen when it comes to privacy?
So privacy itself within crypto has gone through an interesting journey, I would say when it comes to compliance, especially in the US over the past few years.
I think personally what is required on a foundational level is infrastructure that enables everyone to get access to privacy the way they need and that can mean for a regulated institution that that regulated institution needs to be able to replicate some of the processes that Nowadays within their companies need to enforce anyways can do so in a private way.
What I mean by that is being able to not just do one dimensional privacy of moving assets but doing multi-dimensional privacy of running entire computations within an encrypted space sort of without having to leak.
And then we can think about how compliance can look like in the future now that we have access to those more powerful primitives.
So I think in that sense technology will actually shape regulation and a lot of this kind of regulation is out of date when it comes to the kind of cryptographic and technological primitives that we now have access to.
Yeah, and when you were at the digital asset Summit, I understand that you took the stage and we're discussing what's happening in privacy with Solana here.
So tell us about the announcement with Umbria.
Yeah, so Umbria is is a company built on top of Archeum, and Archae itself is this encrypted execution engine that enables you to take any piece of information, encrypt it, and run a computation over it.
And what that means in practice is that we can in let's say 1 to 2 years expect that most crypto trading on chain will not be public but instead will be private, will be.
Running within Archem, let's say, where we will have dark pools, encrypted capital markets, confidential smart order outing between all of those trading venues which will lead to better price execution and privacy.
And what Ambra is doing, building on top of this tech stack that we've built with Archeum which enables you to run those invisible encrypted computations at the fastest speed possible while you get full privacy and trustlessness is.
Making it accessible for retail users and for something like a neobank to integrate privacy into their stablecoin payments to give privacy to everyday crypto users.
That's what Abra has has been building towards, powered by Archaum, and they've been very well anticipated within the Solana ecosystem over the last 6 months because they performed one of the largest ICOs in Solana history.
Over $155 million US dollars in commitments for their public sale on chain.
So for me personally as a founder of an infrastructure company that has always made me very proud, and we've spent a lot of resources on helping them succeed and get to this point, but it's only the beginning, I guess.
And speaking of the beginning, what is in the future, and do you think this technology is ready to scale for the masses?
I think privacy in general has not found the kind of adoption everywhere we look on the internet for one main reason, which is convenience as an enemy of privacy.
You don't want to go out of your way to send private messages to anyone, right?
You could use Signal, but for most of your conversations I'm sure you're not using Signal, and it's the same for everyone, basically.
So there's this inherent.
Friction and tension between privacy and convenience, but it actually turns out it doesn't have to be the case.
It's not a fundamental issue of privacy.
It's only an issue of how these systems have been built in the past, how technology has been built, and From what direction this technology has been built, so what we set out to do when we started with Arum is to look at user needs and applications first and then design all of this complex cryptography and mathematics.
All this tech right instead of starting with the tech, right, starting with this idea and saying we need to force this onto the world and so we said, OK, what does the world need?
How can we build and enable superior products and applications and then let's build privacy to serve that instead.
Well, Yannik, always great talking to you.
Thank you so much for joining us here at the New York Stock Exchange and thank you so much for your insights and perspective.
Thanks for having me, Rey.
Thank you.