
Big Four accounting firm EY, formerly Ernst & Young, has changed its enterprise-focused Ethereum layer-2 blockchain Nightfall to a zero-knowledge rollup design as it says corporate clients are more comfortable with privacy solutions with easing US sanctions.
EY said in an April 2 announcement that Nightfallâs new source code, âNightfall_4,â simplifies the networkâs architecture and offers near-instant transaction finality on Ethereum while making it more accessible to users than its previous optimistic rollup-based version.
EYâs global blockchain leader, Paul Brody, told Cointelegraph that switching to a ZK-rollup model âmeans instant finality, but it also makes operations simpler since you donât need a challenger node to secure the network,â which verifies the correctness of transactions.
The move away from optimistic rollups means Nightfall users wonât need to challenge potentially incorrect transactions on Ethereum and wait out the challenging period, leading to faster transaction finality.
No such feature is present with zero-knowledge rollups, meaning that a transaction becomes final as soon as it is added into a Nightfall block, EY said.Â
It is the fourth major update to Nightfall since EY launched the business-focused Ethereum layer 2 in 2019.
Nightfall enables the firmâs business partners to transfer tokens privately using Ethereumâs security while being cheaper than the base network. It also uses a technology that binds a verified identity to a public key through digital signatures to try to stem counterparty risk.
Nixed Tornado Cash sanctions âhelped people feel comfortableâ
Brody said the US Treasuryâs Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctions on the crypto mixing service Tornado Cash âhad a chilling effect on legitimate business user interest.â
âEven though we long ago took steps to make Nightfall unattractive to bad actors, since it cannot be used anonymously, the removal of OFAC sanctions has really helped people feel comfortable that using a privacy technology will not be risky,â he added.
Nightfallâs code is open source on GitHub but remains a permissioned blockchain for EYâs customer base, competing with the likes of the IBM-backed Hyperledger Fabric, R3 Corda and the Consensus-built Quorum.
Brody said that EYâs blockchain team is working toward âa single environment that supports payments, logic, and composability.â
Currently, the firm requires Nightfall and Starlight, a tool that can change smart contract code to enable zero-knowledge proofs âto enable complex multiparty business agreements under privacy,â he added.
âWeâll spend some time supporting Nightfall_4 deployments initially,â Brody said. âThen weâll move on to the development of Nightfall_5.â
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