Vitalik: AI agents require ZK cryptographic privacy to prevent API calls from exposing user behavior

動區BlockTempo
ETH3,51%

Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin calls for the development of cryptographic privacy mechanisms to protect API access security and privacy payments in the AI agent era using ZK technology.
(Background: Vitalik casually mentions the “Ethereum One-Year Leap Plan”: after L1 scaling, throughput will increase tenfold)
(Additional context: The Ethereum Foundation reorganizes its R&D team into “Protocol,” focusing on expanding L1 and Blobs, and improving user UX experience)

When you let AI help you plan your schedule, search for medical options, or manage assets, have you considered that your “behavior patterns and thoughts” are continuously leaking to service providers through API calls? Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin warned today (8th) on X: without cryptographic privacy and anonymous payment mechanisms, AI could become the end of human privacy.

Vitalik pointed out that even if AI runs locally, as long as it needs to call external services (APIs), the user’s “search path” is fully visible. Traditional HTTP API calls using access keys or tokens allow service providers to easily infer user intent.

He emphasized that behavioral data has greater inferential power than raw data; service providers can deduce users’ health, financial, and political tendencies from API access patterns.

Crypto privacy is needed if you want to make API calls without compromising the information of your access patterns.

e.g., even with a local AI agent, you can learn a lot about what someone is doing if you see all of their search engine calls

first-order solution to that is to…

— vitalik.eth (@VitalikButerin) March 8, 2026

ZK Technology and Mixnets: Blockchain’s Privacy Solutions

To address these issues, Vitalik proposed a multi-layered technical approach. First is “Mixnets,” which use network-level hops to prevent service providers from knowing who made the request, thus hiding the request source.

Second is “ZK API Payments,” utilizing zero-knowledge proofs (ZK) to enable payments without revealing identity, along with encrypted reputation mechanisms to prevent malicious abuse, such as DoS attacks.

Compared to traditional centralized verification via Azure or OpenAI, the encrypted approach advocates running large language models (LLMs) locally, combined with TEE (Trusted Execution Environment) and on-chain identity standards like ERC-8004, allowing models to run on the user’s device and generate encrypted proofs, ensuring that computation remains confidential.

Ethereum: Privacy Infrastructure for the AI Era

In Vitalik’s vision, Ethereum’s role has evolved beyond mere financial assets to become the privacy infrastructure needed in the AI age. As AI becomes an extension of human capability, blockchain technology is poised to be a key tool to ensure this power is not abused by centralized entities.

Disclaimer: The information on this page may come from third parties and does not represent the views or opinions of Gate. The content displayed on this page is for reference only and does not constitute any financial, investment, or legal advice. Gate does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information and shall not be liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Virtual asset investments carry high risks and are subject to significant price volatility. You may lose all of your invested principal. Please fully understand the relevant risks and make prudent decisions based on your own financial situation and risk tolerance. For details, please refer to Disclaimer.

Related Articles

Major CEX Records $33.74M USDT Outflow in Past Hour

Gate News message, April 22 — According to Coinglass data, a major CEX experienced a net outflow of 33.74 million USDT in the past hour.

GateNews41m ago

Ethereum Spot ETFs Record $43.36M Net Inflows Yesterday, Marking 9th Consecutive Day of Positive Flows

Gate News message, April 22 — Ethereum spot ETFs recorded net inflows of $43.36 million yesterday (April 21, U.S. Eastern Time), according to SoSoValue data. This marks the ninth consecutive day of net inflows for the asset class. BlackRock's ETHA led all funds with $37.00 million in single-day inf

GateNews2h ago

Bitcoin Spot ETFs See $11.84M Net Inflows Yesterday, Extending 6-Day Streak

Gate News message, April 22 — Bitcoin spot ETFs recorded total net inflows of $11.84 million yesterday (April 21, U.S. Eastern Time), according to SoSoValue data, extending a six-day consecutive inflow streak. BlackRock's IBIT led all funds with $39.34 million in single-day net inflows, bringing it

GateNews2h ago

USDT supply reaches a new all-time high of 188 billion USD, with 550 million users relying on payment savings

Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino announced on April 21 that the circulating supply of USDT has reached a new all-time high of $188.0 billion, further widening its lead over competitors and making it the third-largest crypto asset by market cap, trailing only Bitcoin and Ethereum. Ardoino emphasized that more than 550 million users in emerging markets currently rely on USDT for everyday payments.

MarketWhisper2h ago

Aave TVL Falls $15.1B in 3.5 Days; Spark Leads Gains

On April 22, on-chain analyst Yu Jin monitoring showed that, impacted by the rsETH/KelpDAO incident, Aave funds continued to flow out; within three and a half days, total deposits fell from $48.5 billion to $30.7 billion. Morpho saw a modest outflow of $1.5 billion over the same period. The most notable contrast comes from Spark, whose SparkLend business TVL rose against the trend from $1.9 billion to $3.2 billion.

MarketWhisper2h ago

Aave Deposits Drop to $30.7B as $15.1B Flows Out in 3.5 Days Post-Kelp Incident

Gate News message, April 22 — According to on-chain analyst Yu Jin's monitoring, Aave has experienced continued fund outflows over 3.5 days following the Kelp security incident, with total deposits declining from $48.5 billion to $30.7 billion, representing a loss of approximately one-third of depos

GateNews3h ago
Comment
0/400
No comments