Fairblock raises $2.5M for fully private blockchain transactions

The Fairblock team has recently secured $2.5 million from investors to bring conditional encryption to blockchains

article-image

LoudPhoto/Shutterstock modified by Blcokworks

share

Fairblock is hoping to make conditional decryption and pre-execution privacy a reality. 

Conditional decryption refers to allowing users to set conditions that enable protocols to execute transactions without revealing any on-chain information before execution. 

Unlike zero-knowledge (ZK) technology, Fairblock is designed so that information is only encrypted or decrypted under certain conditions. 

It does so through advanced cryptography, including identity-based encryption and witness encryption. The company is also looking into fully homomorphic encryption, or FHE, which will enable computations to be performed on fully encrypted data. 

Peyman Momeni, Fairblock’s co-founder, told Blockworks that the team had secured $2.5 million in pre-seed funding to build this infrastructure.

The funding round was led by Galileo and saw participation from Lemniscap, Dialectic, Robot Ventures, GSR, Chorus One, Dorahacks, and Reverie, just to name a few.

“Applications like sealed-bid auctions, randomness generation, private governance, encrypted limit orders, all these kinds of ideas can be built on top of our infrastructure using our cryptographic libraries,” Momeni said. 

Read more: Blockframe using sealed bid auctions for NFT price discovery

Momeni notes that Fairblock’s goal is to lower risks for average crypto users, adding that there are still many issues with transactions being front-run or having the contents of a transaction leaked, creating a market skewed to favor people with financial knowledge or development experience. 

“We want to build something that gives the freedom to users to optionally keep their transactions and protect the contents of the transactions. Transactions can be decrypted under certain conditions, such as a deadline or specific prices,” he said. 

What this would look like in practice, Momeni explains, would be an SDK that is integrated with the front end of applications that choose to use Fairblock. 

In a governance proposal, for example, users can submit their votes as usual but have an extended toggle function, enabling them to encrypt their votes.

“If their transaction is encrypted, it will go through that normal process, hit the mempool of the blockchain as usual, and votes that are not encrypted will be included as plaintext…both of these will be aggregated until the deadline or other conditions are met, and we will generate a single decryption key using identity-based encryption,” Momeni said.

He noted that the purpose of Fairblock in this particular scenario would be to act as a service provider that enables the generation of keys under certain conditions.

Fairblock has been built using the Cosmos SDK, but is not limited to just the Cosmos ecosystem, Momeni said.

“You can think of us as an Axelar or an oracle for providing decryption keys to consumer chains — which could include a rollup or a smart contract, so even though we are in Cosmos, we can include their transaction and send it to a smart contract on Ethereum,” he said. 

The blockchain has recently upgraded to a second private testnet with a public testnet imminent.


Start your day with top crypto insights from David Canellis and Katherine Ross. Subscribe to the Empire newsletter.

Explore the growing intersection between crypto, macroeconomics, policy and finance with Ben Strack, Casey Wagner and Felix Jauvin. Subscribe to the Forward Guidance newsletter.

Get alpha directly in your inbox with the 0xResearch newsletter — market highlights, charts, degen trade ideas, governance updates, and more.

The Lightspeed newsletter is all things Solana, in your inbox, every day. Subscribe to daily Solana news from Jack Kubinec and Jeff Albus.

Tags

Upcoming Events

Javits Center North | 445 11th Ave

Tues - Thurs, March 18 - 20, 2025

Blockworks’ Digital Asset Summit (DAS) will feature conversations between the builders, allocators, and legislators who will shape the trajectory of the digital asset ecosystem in the US and abroad.

recent research

Unlocked by Template.jpg

Research

The BitcoinOS team is the first to have developed and posted a ZK-compressed proof on the Bitcoin network. Other proof verification efforts have been limited to the Signet or testnet deployments. Their work has resulted in the development of BitSNARK, a software library for ZK-compressed fraud proofs on the Bitcoin network. The project aims to provide a horizontal scaling solution, offering a one-stop shop for teams interested in developing a rollup on Bitcoin. This approach shares similarities with the horizontal tech stack scaling in other ecosystems like Cosmos and Optimism, particularly in its focus on simplified verification, bridging standards, and lightweight interoperability.

/

article-image

A16z’s State of Crypto report shows that DeFi has the largest number of daily active addresses, with stablecoins following closely behind

article-image

G2 is delivering real-world performance breakthroughs at 50-100 Mgas/s, Conduit says

article-image

World Liberty Financial’s token sale debuted just as an absurd AI-fueled memecoin captured crypto’s attention

article-image

Coinbase hired History Associates in 2023 to assist in retrieving records from the SEC and FDIC

article-image

Hours after pledging to support Black men’s rights to safely invest in crypto, VP Harris’s Monday night speech mentioned blockchain zero times