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    XRP Ledger adds zero-knowledge proofs targeting institutional privacy gap

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    The Boundless integration enables private transaction execution on XRPL while maintaining compliance, addressing what the company calls the «transparency tax» that has held back institutional adoption of public blockchains.

    A padlock secures a gate hasp. (Shutterstock)

    What to know:

    • XRP Ledger integrated Boundless, a zero-knowledge (ZK) proving network, to support native verification of ZK proofs and enable private transactions on its public blockchain.
    • The move is designed to allow financial institutions to transact without exposing sensitive details, such as transaction size, counterparties or treasury positions, while meeting regulatory and compliance requirements.
    • The infrastructure may also be more resilient to quantum computing threats than traditional cryptography, helping XRPL future-proof its institutional-grade blockchain against emerging risks.
  • XRP Ledger integrated Boundless, a zero-knowledge (ZK) proving network, to support native verification of ZK proofs and enable private transactions on its public blockchain.
  • The move is designed to allow financial institutions to transact without exposing sensitive details, such as transaction size, counterparties or treasury positions, while meeting regulatory and compliance requirements.
  • The infrastructure may also be more resilient to quantum computing threats than traditional cryptography, helping XRPL future-proof its institutional-grade blockchain against emerging risks.
  • The XRP Ledger added native support for zero-knowledge (ZK) proof verification by integrating with Boundless, a ZK proving network, in what the company claims is the first deployment of its kind on the ledger.

    The move is designed to let financial institutions transact privately on the public blockchain while meeting regulatory requirements.

    It addresses a specific barrier to institutional adoption that has persisted across every public blockchain. Transaction flows, treasury positions, and counterparty relationships are visible by default on public ledgers. For a bank settling cross-border payments or a fund managing OTC positions, that transparency creates competitive risk.

    Zero-knowledge proofs solve this by allowing one party to prove a statement is true without revealing the underlying data. It’s like passing a credit check, where the bank confirms an individual qualifies for a loan without telling the lender specifics about income, debts or account balance.

    In practice on XRPL, this means a payment can be verified as valid, correctly funded, and compliant without exposing the amount, the sender, or the receiver to the public ledger.

    XRPL already has institutional traction that most layer-1 blockchains do not. SBI Holdings in Japan, Zand Bank in the UAE, Archax in the U.K. and Guggenheim Treasury Services in the U.S. all use the network.

    More than $550 million has been deployed into XRPL ecosystem initiatives. The connection to Boundless gives those institutional users a path to privacy they did not previously have on the ledger.

    The timing is notable given the broader conversation around blockchain cryptography this month.

    Google’s quantum computing paper forced every major chain to evaluate its cryptographic assumptions. ZK proofs are built on different mathematical foundations than the elliptic curve cryptography that quantum threatens, and several ZK proof systems are already considered quantum-resistant or can be upgraded to post-quantum constructions more easily than traditional signature schemes.

    Adding ZK infrastructure now positions XRPL to build on cryptographic foundations that may age better than the ones the quantum debate is focused on.

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