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Why blockchain’s confidentiality problem is holding back banking
Since the seed of an idea around a cryptographically linked chain of blocks first emerged, blockchain has come a long way. Today, the tech is being used in many use cases, but it’s in financial services where it is being adopted at scale, and ticking a lot of the boxes it promised early on.
For example, BlackRock used JP Morgan Chase’ Tokenized Collateral Network (TCN) to tokenise shares in one of its money market funds, which were then sent to Barclays as collateral for an over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives trade between the firms. This transaction, which used a private blockchain on JP Morgan’s platform, now called Kinexys, demonstrated the greater efficiency and stability which blockchain can offer.
When it comes to banking and finance though, which is still arguably the most compelling case for blockchain, there is something still missing. Yes, it can remove friction, cut delays, and streamline processes - but for most in the sector, the lack of confidentiality is a clear dealbreaker.
Unlike traditional systems, public blockchains expose everything by default. Wallet balances, transaction histories, and counterparties are visible to anyone - meaning every deposit, loan, and withdrawal can be scrutinised. This transparency may not faze retail crypto traders, but for private banks and their clients managing significant capital, it’s a huge problem. It could be a bank conducting a discreet client trade, a hedge fund managing sensitive portfolios, or wealth managers handling confidential transactions, whatever the case, exposing financial details risks breaching client privacy and completely undermining any competitive advantage.
Growing demand for privacy-preserving technologies
With the above risks simply not acceptable in banking, many potential blockchain use cases in finance are either being shelved or remain in experimental stages.
But that’s starting to change. Apple, IBM and a wave of privacy-focused blockchain projects are making headlines, seeing demand build across the finance world for privacy-preserving technologies. Tech that can enable confidential, scalable, and compliant onchain financial applications - without compromising performance, compliance, or auditability. Tech that can redefine how confidentiality is handled in the blockchain and, ultimately, in all of cloud computing. Tech that sits in the field of Fully Homomorphic Encryption (FHE).
Put simply, FHE is a privacy-preserving technology that enables data to be processed without ever decrypting it - meaning that sensitive information remains encrypted even while in use. In other words, it’s an encryption technique that allows you to have confidentiality on top of public blockchains.
Story ContinuesCryptography as a field may be very obscure and opaque, but the use cases it enables are very obvious once it actually works, including:
Overcoming barriers to FHE adoption
While the benefits are clear, FHE is not yet fully adopted across blockchain as of now, and the reason for that is simple: historical barriers around performance and accessibility.
However, with demand rising by the day, there is a real drive on getting this technology into real-world products and work to actively addressing the core challenges that have historically held back FHE adoption is underway, such as:
Up until now, the only way to use a blockchain was to disclose everything to everyone. But at the current rate of development and more of finance moving onchain by the day, the prospect of executing complex transactions with full confidentiality, regulatory compliance and institutional-grade performance could be sooner than many think.
Jason Delabays is Blockchain Ecosystem Lead at Zama
"Why blockchain’s confidentiality problem is holding back banking" was originally created and published by Retail Banker International, a GlobalData owned brand.
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