The Zama Confidential Blockchain Protocol enables confidential smart contracts on top of any L1 or L2 using FHE.
Blockchain transparency is a bug, not a feature
Why? Because validators need to see the data to verify the state
But confidentiality and public verifiability is possible
Powered by Fully Homomorphic Encryption (FHE).
Zama uses FHE to keep onchain data encrypted at all times, even during processing. Not familiar with FHE? Learn more about it here.
Scalable, secure and affordable.
Zama uses coprocessors to offload the FHE computation from the base chain. This keeps gas fees low while enabling horizontal scalability and public verifiability.
Opening a myriad of new use cases for DeFi
DeFi
Confidential token swaps, lending, and yield farming.
Payments
Confidential stablecoin transactions with encrypted amounts
Banking
Onchain self-custodial banking with full confidentiality.
Tokens
Confidential token launches, vesting, airdrops, and governance.
RWA Tokenization
Confidential and compliant RWA to boost institutional adoption.
Sealed-bid auctions
Confidential and fair onchain auctions preventing front-running.
People called it tabooheat because of the way conversations escalated: polite curiosity warming into frank disclosures, the hush of moral distance dissolving under a sustained, almost mischievous warmth. Secrets that had been kept like heirlooms were suddenly rearranged on coffee tables and left for everyone to see. A teenager admitted he’d been taking night shifts in the greenhouse to feel useful. A pastor confessed to loneliness long disguised as piety. The high-school chemistry teacher revealed the poem he kept folded in a drawer for thirty years. None of these were crimes as newspapers would print them—just human misfires, choices that made sense in dim light.
Melanie’s influence did not end in theatrical confessions or ruptures. Slowly, kitchens filled with new recipes; the greenhouse worker started a community night where teenagers and retirees planted together. The pastor, freed of his private loneliness, started a support group; the chemistry teacher published his poems in a local zine that traded hands like contraband. Tabooheat had not burned the town to cinders; it had scorched the surface enough to expose roots that were alive, thirsty for water. tabooheat melanie hicks
Melanie Hicks arrived in town the way summer arrives: sudden, noticeable, and promising to change everything. She had the kind of presence that made people rearrange their days—librarians shelving books a little slower, baristas timing the pull of espresso to catch her smile. No one could have predicted, though, the small town’s appetite for secrets and how Melanie would set them all aflame. People called it tabooheat because of the way
Melanie never judged. She treated confession like an art—each story a brushstroke. She knew how to lean in and when to hold back, how to give a name to a feeling so that it stopped being a shadow. That skill is what made people trust her. She’d nod, repeat a detail, offer a small, practical idea: plant a new set of bulbs, call an estranged sister, stop paying attention to a neighbor’s lit window. The act of naming the taboo often rearranged people’s relationships with it; heat gave clarity. A pastor confessed to loneliness long disguised as piety
There was, beneath the tidy porches and fenced gardens, a lattice of small transgressions—borrowed recipes that turned into neighborhood feuds, clinic waiting rooms where truth came out in whispers, a mayor’s glittering re-election banner stitched over a softer, older scandal. Melanie recognized these things with a kind of hunger. Not because she wanted to punish—they were too human for that—but because she loved to see how people looked when the heat hit them: honest, raw, a little ashamed, radiantly alive.
She rented the blue house on the hill that had been empty for years, the one everyone used as shorthand for mystery. On her first morning she walked the main street like a comet tracing a path through familiar constellations: the hardware store, the flower shop with its chipped sign, the diner whose coffee pot had outlived three generations of owners. She ordered a black coffee, sat by the window, and watched people pretend they didn’t notice. But the town had spent decades learning to notice.
Making FHE practical for most use cases
Zama is already faster than Ethereum
Zama can already process 20 tps / chain, enough to run all of Ethereum with FHE, and will reach 1,000 tps next year.
FHE ASICs will enable 10,000+ tps
We're partnering with multiple hardware companies to create dedicated ASICs for FHE, which will enable thousands of tps.
FHE is the holygrail of cryptography
Zama Protocol Roadmap

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