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I was introduced to the CEO of Arcium — Yannik Schrade — via an interview he did with Tucker Carlson several weeks back. I watched that interview with fascination as I had long been deeply interested in privacy, and the future of humanity, as we fight off the installation of the digital control grid that will enslave us forever.
Whether it be finance, geolocation, communications, or your most secret desires and interests, the matrix is surveilling us by the second, and squirreling away the data to be used against you if needed in the future to maintain power and control resources.
Yannik Schrade gets it. And, more importantly, is doing something about it.
Scrade’s company Arcium which boasts large investors like Coinbase, is on a mission to encrypt all compute by putting it on-chain.
Judging by the reaction of his competitors on the panel with him that discussed privacy in the digital age, the matrix really doesn’t like what he is doing.
Schrade wants to provide confidentiality, privacy, on public block chain networks, to allow private information to interact with other private information, which opens up a whole new design space for development and innovation.

“You can enforce actual privacy by cryptography, mathematics,” declared Schrade. “The universe provides for this.”
“By removing single points of failure, we can get rid of trust networks. We can develop crypto guardrails so nobody can see anything.
“Constructed around a mathmatical game. all participants will mutually distrust. We can enable mistrusting participants to solve problems without trusting each other.
"We can exchange without leaking signals, and can inject much more information without trust.
"We seeing the evolution of the block chain, which now can be in a fully encrypted shared state.
"It is important to be providing a full feature set, without relying on single points of failure. Otherwise, there is no reason to use crypto, distributed ledgers.
"Compliance can be solved. Who needs to be compliant on the chain? This involves composability — being able to move from public shared state to private encrypted shared state.
"We can unlock in an institutional setting; can turn black box trading venues into lit venues, but will be encrypted.
"Both sides can get info from encrypted execution - the technology is evolving - get rid of expensive processes, simply define clear rules how information is being process and consequences of information being encrypted, third parties agreed to rules.
I am extremely cyberpunk -- the ideal world is a fully encrypted world - everyone has the ability to bring themselves into a superior position by keeping ownership of all information.
"Are we aiding elicit finance? Cyberpunk principles means a knock on the door by three letter agencies, and difficult conversations," replied fellow panelist Patrick O'Grady, founder of Commonware. We are not into being fully encrypted."
There was also big push back from Eric Saraniecki, of Canton Network. He used the word ludicrous in discussing Schrade's comments.
While traveling on the MTA Metro North train after the conference, I received a text notification that I had activated my ticket too late and was in danger of an $8 surcharge being added to my account.
We need privacy. The CCP-style control grid to modify behavior is coming.








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