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As a journalist, I don’t follow the crowd. While many chase the dazzling glow of short-lived trends, I search for what truly matters — the enduring truths and silent values long buried by time. Among them is FHE, a once-forgotten encryption technology, now brought back to life by @zama In the tech world, there’s no shortage of brilliant ideas that are praised briefly, then discarded as “not ready for the real world.” Fully Homomorphic Encryption (FHE) was one of those. FHE is an encryption method that allows data to be processed without being decrypted. This means third-party systems like servers or AI models can analyze encrypted data without ever seeing the original content. Although theoretically possible for over a decade, FHE was once seen as too slow and complex for real-world use. Even top security companies weren’t ready for it. However, as data breaches increased, protecting data during computation became essential — turning FHE from a luxury into a necessity. #ZamaCreatorProgram BUT
Zama is a startup based in France with a bold mission: to make FHE usable in the real world. They didn’t stop at theoretical work — they focused on optimizing, simplifying, and productizing FHE for developers. Zama built TFHE, a faster, lighter variant of FHE optimized for bit-level processing — perfect for blockchain. More importantly, they introduced FHEVM, an Ethereum-compatible virtual machine that can run smart contracts on encrypted data, all while allowing developers to code in standard Solidity. Zama didn’t stop there. They released Concrete and Concrete ML, open-source libraries that allow Web3 and AI developers to apply FHE without being cryptography experts. And with Zama Cloud, they are offering FHE-as-a-service — bringing the technology even closer to real-world applications.
So what’s changed? Suddenly, a wide range of use cases are emerging: anonymous voting with full transparency, AI models diagnosing diseases without ever seeing patient data, and private blockchain transactions that still follow community rules. Thanks to Zama, FHE — once considered “too slow to be useful” — is transforming into the golden key to the privacy-first, decentralized future. No longer just a dream, it now stands as a viable foundation for what comes next: computation without exposure, collaboration without trust, and privacy without compromise.