122: Inside TzEL and the Future of Private Payments on Tezos
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
Enjoyed our podcast? Shoot us a text and let us know—because great conversations never end at the last word!
This week on TezTalks Radio, we’re joined by Arthur Breitman, co-founder of Tezos, for a deep conversation about TzEL, an experimental project exploring private, post-quantum payments on Tezos testnet.
At the center of the discussion is a deceptively simple question:
If blockchain data can remain public forever, what does privacy actually mean over time?
Rather than treating privacy as a momentary concern, this episode looks at the long-term reality of encrypted transaction data that may still exist decades from now — and what happens if future cryptographic assumptions change.
🎙️ The conversation moves through private payments, post-quantum cryptography, rollups, the DAL, and the engineering realities of turning research ideas into working systems.
🔍 In this episode, we explore:
- Why blockchain privacy has a “time problem”
- What kinds of transaction data remain exposed long term
- Why Arthur became interested in private post-quantum payments specifically
- What TzEL is actually testing — and what it is not claiming yet
- How Tezos’ long-term adaptability connects back to post-quantum design
- The difference between a research prototype and production infrastructure
- What had to be built to make TzEL function end to end
- Why proof size becomes a major constraint for private systems
- How the Tezos DAL changes what becomes practical
- Why heavier cryptographic systems may naturally live in rollups
- How viewing keys, detector keys, and selective disclosure work in practice
- What this experiment reveals about the future design space for Tezos
This is one of the clearest conversations yet on how Tezos infrastructure, rollups, governance, and long-term adaptability connect together underneath the surface.