At the Argentina Devconnect conference in November last year, Ethereum Foundation researcher Justin Drake showcased an eye-catching verification scheme. The highlight of this scheme is that validation nodes no longer need to process heavy on-chain data but instead rely on Pico zkVM provided by Brevis to perform verification—meaning nodes can confirm block validity using zero-knowledge proofs.
What’s interesting about this approach is that it breaks the limitations of traditional validation. Previously, validation nodes needed to store and verify the full data set, which required high hardware specifications. Now, with lightweight clients like zkLighthouse, node operation becomes more efficient while maintaining security. Pico zkVM serves as the core engine, handling complex cryptographic validations, making the entire process scalable.
This direction has significant implications for the future of Web3. Imagine that when verification costs drop significantly, more people can participate in running nodes, increasing the network’s decentralization. Meanwhile, shifting the computational burden to more efficient zero-knowledge proof systems undoubtedly opens new possibilities for blockchain handling large-scale transactions.
Of course, this is still in the technological exploration stage, and practical implementation will face many challenges. But from a strategic perspective, using zero-knowledge proofs to streamline the validation process indeed represents an important evolution in blockchain validation.
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GateUser-7b078580
· 01-06 18:45
Although... zkVM sounds good, but the data landing cost remains high. Let's wait a bit longer.
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rugged_again
· 01-05 05:45
The zkVM approach is indeed impressive; finally, someone thought of offloading the verification work to zero-knowledge proofs.
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CantAffordPancake
· 01-05 05:36
zkVM this thing sounds good, but we still need to wait and see when it comes to practical use.
Lowering the barrier is indeed a good thing, but I'm worried it might just become a new game for tech elites again.
Finally, someone has thought of it—running such heavy nodes is unaffordable for everyone.
This idea is correct, but it feels like it still needs a few more years of polishing before it can truly be implemented.
Zero-knowledge proof is indeed awesome, but the ecosystem still needs to catch up.
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LightningPacketLoss
· 01-05 05:26
zkVM sounds pretty good, but can it really be cheap enough for ordinary people to run nodes?
At the Argentina Devconnect conference in November last year, Ethereum Foundation researcher Justin Drake showcased an eye-catching verification scheme. The highlight of this scheme is that validation nodes no longer need to process heavy on-chain data but instead rely on Pico zkVM provided by Brevis to perform verification—meaning nodes can confirm block validity using zero-knowledge proofs.
What’s interesting about this approach is that it breaks the limitations of traditional validation. Previously, validation nodes needed to store and verify the full data set, which required high hardware specifications. Now, with lightweight clients like zkLighthouse, node operation becomes more efficient while maintaining security. Pico zkVM serves as the core engine, handling complex cryptographic validations, making the entire process scalable.
This direction has significant implications for the future of Web3. Imagine that when verification costs drop significantly, more people can participate in running nodes, increasing the network’s decentralization. Meanwhile, shifting the computational burden to more efficient zero-knowledge proof systems undoubtedly opens new possibilities for blockchain handling large-scale transactions.
Of course, this is still in the technological exploration stage, and practical implementation will face many challenges. But from a strategic perspective, using zero-knowledge proofs to streamline the validation process indeed represents an important evolution in blockchain validation.