Non-profit · open-source · no token

Computation can be private
and still be checkable.

The zase Foundation is a non-profit dedicated to privacy-preserving and verifiable computation: cryptographic research and open-source tools that keep what you compute confidential, while letting the result be checked by anyone who needs to trust it.

The mission

Privacy as a default, verifiability as a discipline

Two problems sit at the heart of the Foundation's work. Privacy: metadata — who talks to whom, when, and from where — leaks more than message contents ever did, and a global passive observer reconstructs lives from it. Verifiability: computation is expensive, but checking a result can be cheap — so a result should be able to travel with a succinct proof that it is correct. We study the cryptography for both and release it openly.

◈ confidential

Confidential by construction

Authenticated, key-committing encryption; sender anonymity via ring signatures; threshold authorization; continuous-time mix-style cover traffic. The building blocks of metadata-resistant systems.

✓ verifiable

Cheap to verify

"Computing is expensive; verifying can be cheap." We research certificates that let an untrusted party prove a result is correct without redoing the work.

◇ open

Open and reproducible

Apache-2.0 source, public specifications, a pinned toolchain and reproducible builds, and a supply-chain-audited dependency tree.

How we work

Principles

⚖ neutral

Credibly neutral

A non-profit steward, not a company. The work answers to its users and to the research, never to a cap table or an exit.

⊚ honest

Honest about limits

We state plainly what is proven, what is assumed, and what still needs external audit. Hand-rolled cryptography is not relied upon until reviewed.

⊘ minimal

Minimal by design

The smallest system that solves the problem has the smallest attack surface. We delete more than we add.

What this is — and isn't. zase is a research foundation and a set of open-source cryptographic libraries. It is not a blockchain, not a token or investment, and not a hosted product or public service. There is nothing to buy and nothing to sign up for. The code is a proof of concept and is not yet audited — do not use it to protect anything you cannot afford to lose. The vision paper describes what we are working toward and is deliberately about principles and direction, not operational detail.