Mesari Research Institute recently evaluated in a report that the private chain framework “Prividium” based on ZKsync will become a core architecture that simultaneously enhances the scalability and privacy of the Ethereum ecosystem. Through the Airbender and Atlas upgrades, Prividium is expected to achieve excellent performance, low costs, and improved settlement finality, and is anticipated to have a direct impact on enterprise blockchain deployments and ZK token circulation structures.
Prividium is a permissioned private chain built on the ZKsync stack, storing all execution and state data in an off-chain database while performing effective settlement on Ethereum via zero-knowledge proofs. This allows enterprises to obtain verifiable settlement paths without exposing sensitive internal data externally. According to the Mesari report, users can support authentication systems such as Okta, Azure, and login functions via Ethereum wallets, enabling parallel integration of existing security policies with blockchain access.
The Airbender proof system introduced in June 2025 significantly improves proof speed and efficiency. Based on publicly available benchmark data, Airbender can process an average Ethereum block in about 17 seconds without high-performance GPUs, with complete end-to-end proofs completed in approximately 35 seconds. This performance metric minimizes concerns about settlement reliability caused by proof processing delays. Especially in private chain operations, reducing reliance on high-end hardware infrastructure becomes a core competitive advantage for simplifying organizational blockchain cost structures and reducing operational complexity.
The Atlas upgrade announced in October of the same year greatly optimized the overall operational efficiency of the ZK stack. Unlike previous purely throughput-focused expansions, Atlas functions by achieving ZK finality within 1 second and supporting over 15,000 TPS through comprehensive optimization, with proof costs per transaction set at around $0.0001. Mesari also analyzed that this structure plays a decisive role in shortening external settlement paths within privacy environments and enhancing predictability.
The Prividium chain also supports interoperability with Ethereum and other ZKsync chains. This is a structure that allows asset and message exchange through a shared settlement and proof layer without bridging or external relays. In particular, it provides institutions with a path to interact with Ethereum-based DeFi while maintaining private operations. It also features a selective disclosure mechanism, allowing specific contract information to be selectively made public as needed. This serves as a device to meet regulatory and audit requirements.
The expansion of Prividium is also directly related to the economic role of ZK tokens. Mesari cited an evaluation of Alex Gluchowski’s token proposal, stating that with the activation of Prividium, interoperability fees and enterprise license revenues could become future value-creating structures based on ZK token utility. Fees and license revenues will be reinvested into purchase and distribution structures used for ZK token burning, ecosystem funding, staking rewards, and more, with plans to operate through ZK governance.
On the regulatory front, the combination of private blockchains and ZK technology has also received positive evaluations. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s Crypto Task Force recently mentioned that zero-knowledge proof technology can verify whether specific permissions or conditions are met without exposing personal transaction records, aligning with privacy-preserving compliance models. Prividium is aligned with this policy trend, positioning itself as a chain architecture centered on privacy, responsibility, and transparency.
As more private chains are deployed, the ZKsync stack will essentially serve as an intrinsic coordinating hub connecting Ethereum with other chains. Meanwhile, the proposed ZK token-based revenue model is expected to act as a catalyst, enabling network-level interoperability and value flow. Mesari ultimately emphasized that the combination of this technology and token economics will provide institutions with an optimized blockchain operation model, and through Matter Labs’ management service options, substantial support can be provided throughout deployment and operation.
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Will Prividium, which balances privacy and scalability, become Ethereum's ZK hub?
Mesari Research Institute recently evaluated in a report that the private chain framework “Prividium” based on ZKsync will become a core architecture that simultaneously enhances the scalability and privacy of the Ethereum ecosystem. Through the Airbender and Atlas upgrades, Prividium is expected to achieve excellent performance, low costs, and improved settlement finality, and is anticipated to have a direct impact on enterprise blockchain deployments and ZK token circulation structures.
Prividium is a permissioned private chain built on the ZKsync stack, storing all execution and state data in an off-chain database while performing effective settlement on Ethereum via zero-knowledge proofs. This allows enterprises to obtain verifiable settlement paths without exposing sensitive internal data externally. According to the Mesari report, users can support authentication systems such as Okta, Azure, and login functions via Ethereum wallets, enabling parallel integration of existing security policies with blockchain access.
The Airbender proof system introduced in June 2025 significantly improves proof speed and efficiency. Based on publicly available benchmark data, Airbender can process an average Ethereum block in about 17 seconds without high-performance GPUs, with complete end-to-end proofs completed in approximately 35 seconds. This performance metric minimizes concerns about settlement reliability caused by proof processing delays. Especially in private chain operations, reducing reliance on high-end hardware infrastructure becomes a core competitive advantage for simplifying organizational blockchain cost structures and reducing operational complexity.
The Atlas upgrade announced in October of the same year greatly optimized the overall operational efficiency of the ZK stack. Unlike previous purely throughput-focused expansions, Atlas functions by achieving ZK finality within 1 second and supporting over 15,000 TPS through comprehensive optimization, with proof costs per transaction set at around $0.0001. Mesari also analyzed that this structure plays a decisive role in shortening external settlement paths within privacy environments and enhancing predictability.
The Prividium chain also supports interoperability with Ethereum and other ZKsync chains. This is a structure that allows asset and message exchange through a shared settlement and proof layer without bridging or external relays. In particular, it provides institutions with a path to interact with Ethereum-based DeFi while maintaining private operations. It also features a selective disclosure mechanism, allowing specific contract information to be selectively made public as needed. This serves as a device to meet regulatory and audit requirements.
The expansion of Prividium is also directly related to the economic role of ZK tokens. Mesari cited an evaluation of Alex Gluchowski’s token proposal, stating that with the activation of Prividium, interoperability fees and enterprise license revenues could become future value-creating structures based on ZK token utility. Fees and license revenues will be reinvested into purchase and distribution structures used for ZK token burning, ecosystem funding, staking rewards, and more, with plans to operate through ZK governance.
On the regulatory front, the combination of private blockchains and ZK technology has also received positive evaluations. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s Crypto Task Force recently mentioned that zero-knowledge proof technology can verify whether specific permissions or conditions are met without exposing personal transaction records, aligning with privacy-preserving compliance models. Prividium is aligned with this policy trend, positioning itself as a chain architecture centered on privacy, responsibility, and transparency.
As more private chains are deployed, the ZKsync stack will essentially serve as an intrinsic coordinating hub connecting Ethereum with other chains. Meanwhile, the proposed ZK token-based revenue model is expected to act as a catalyst, enabling network-level interoperability and value flow. Mesari ultimately emphasized that the combination of this technology and token economics will provide institutions with an optimized blockchain operation model, and through Matter Labs’ management service options, substantial support can be provided throughout deployment and operation.