Title: Glossary · EthSystems

URL Source: https://original.es-internal.pages.dev/glossary/

Markdown Content:
---
description: 72 terms used across the EthSystems guide. Organized by category — the same definitions surface as inline tooltips throughout the site.
title: Glossary · EthSystems
image: https://original.es-internal.pages.dev/og/glossary.png
---

[Skip to content](#main-content) 

EthSystems Evaluation Frameworks

CROPS (Censorship Resistance, Open Source and Free, Privacy, Security)

Four non-negotiable properties for Ethereum defined by the Ethereum Foundation. The EthSystems Map evaluates solutions against all four dimensions independently. See \[CONTRIBUTING.md § CROPS Evaluation\](CONTRIBUTING.md#crops-evaluation) for full scoring rubrics.

B2B (Business-to-Business / Institution-to-Institution)

Interaction model where both counterparties are regulated entities (e.g., bank-to-bank settlement). Symmetric power dynamic; both parties have legal teams, vendor choice, and contractual recourse.

B2C (Business-to-Consumer / Institution-to-End-User)

Interaction model where one counterparty is a regulated entity and the other is an individual (e.g., retail payment). Asymmetric power dynamic; CROPS must protect the user from the institution. Institutions should be transparent to regulators and end users; end users should have the right to protect their private lives.

Core Privacy Concepts

Commitment

Cryptographic value computed from hidden data (for example, amount and secrets). It lets others later verify that revealed data is consistent, without learning the data from the commitment itself.

Note

Private record that represents ownership of some value plus the secrets needed to prove it. The note is usually stored off-chain or encrypted; on-chain you only see commitments, nullifiers and proofs.

Nullifier

Unique value derived from a note’s secret and revealed when the note is spent. The system stores used nullifiers to prevent double-spending without exposing which note belonged to which party.

Stealth Address

is an address generated per transaction so that multiple payments to the same party cannot be easily linked on-chain. The recipient publishes some public information once; senders use it to derive fresh, unlinkable addresses.

View Key

is a cryptographic key that allows read-only access to encrypted state, like private balances or notes. It enables controlled visibility for auditors, regulators, or internal control functions.

JoinSplit

Circuit pattern that consumes one or more input notes (revealed via nullifiers) and produces one or more output notes (as new commitments). Enables private transfers, splits, and merges of value.

Memo

Encrypted payload attached to a private transaction containing information the recipient needs (e.g., note details, amount, blinding factor). Only the intended recipient can decrypt it using their encryption key.

Blockchain Architecture

Data Availability (DA)

The guarantee that all transaction and state data needed to recompute and verify the system is actually published and retrievable. If DA fails, independent verifiers cannot reliably check state, even if proofs appear valid.

Sequencer

Layer 2 operator that accepts transactions on a L2 network, orders them, and produces blocks or batches that are later finalized on Layer 1 (like Ethereum).

Prover

Entity that runs a specified computation on given inputs (public and private, like L2 state transistions, private notes,...) and outputs both the result and a cryptographic proof that it was computed correctly. Provers may see plaintext data, so who runs them and how they are operated is an explicit part of the trust and privacy model.

Verifier

Entity (often a smart contract) that checks proofs from provers and decides whether to accept the claimed result (for example, a new state root or settlement outcome).

Relayer

Third party that submits transactions on behalf of users to hide identity

Paymaster

ERC-4337 entity that defines how gas fees for user operations are paid or sponsored. It allows us to implement controlled gasless flows or internal fee routing.

L2 Categories

Scaling Rollup

ZK rollup focused on throughput/cost; state public within L2 (ZKsync, Scroll)

Privacy Rollup

ZK rollup designed for encrypted/private state (Aztec)

Validium

Validity proofs on L1; data availability off-chain

Volition

Hybrid model allowing per-transaction choice between on-chain and off-chain DA

Institutional/TradFi Terms

DvP (Delivery vs Payment)

Atomic settlement ensuring asset delivery only if payment occurs

PvP (Payment vs Payment)

Atomic exchange of two payment obligations

TCA (Transaction Cost Analysis)

Post-trade analysis of execution quality and slippage

AoR (Audit on Request)

Selective disclosure mechanism generating compliance reports on-demand

RFQ (Request for Quote)

OTC trading workflow where market makers provide quotes privately

Best Execution

Obligation to obtain most favorable terms when executing client orders

NAV (Net Asset Value)

Total value of a fund's assets minus liabilities. Per-share NAV = total NAV / shares outstanding.

Standards & Protocols

ERC-3643

Ethereum standard for permissioned tokenized securities with built-in compliance framework

ERC-7573

Standard for conditional cross-chain settlement coordination

EIP-6123

Ethereum standard for derivatives contracts with automated lifecycle management

EIP-5564

Stealth address standard for unlinkable payments

EIP-7805

Fork Choice Inclusion Lists (FOCIL) standard for censorship resistance through committee-enforced transaction inclusion

EIP-7701

Native account abstraction standard enabling custom account validation logic, institutional key management, and ZK-based privacy systems

ERC-7945

Standard for confidential token transfers using cryptographic commitments to hide balances and amounts

ERC-8065

ZK token wrapper standard enabling privacy for existing ERC-20 tokens through shielded wrapping

ISO 20022

International messaging standard for financial services communication

ICMA BDT

International Capital Market Association Bond Data Taxonomy for standardized bond information

Privacy Technologies

FHE (Fully Homomorphic Encryption)

Cryptographic technique allowing computation on encrypted data

Zero-knowledge Proof

A proof that reveals no more information than the validity of the statement it supports.

SNARK/STARK

Zero-knowledge proof systems (Succinct Non-interactive Arguments of Knowledge/Scalable Transparent Arguments of Knowledge)

Co-SNARK

Collaborative zero-knowledge proofs where multiple parties jointly prove properties

Shielded Pool

Privacy mechanism using cryptographic commitments to hide transaction details

Confidential Contract

Smart contract that operates on encrypted state while maintaining verifiability

Circom/Groth16

Popular zero-knowledge proof system and domain-specific language

PLONK

Zero-knowledge proof system with universal trusted setup

TEE (Trusted Execution Environment)

Hardware-based secure computation environment

MPC (Multi-Party Computation)

Cryptographic technique for joint computation without revealing inputs

OPRF (Oblivious Pseudorandom Function)

Cryptographic protocol where a server evaluates a pseudorandom function on a client's input without learning the input, and the client learns the output without learning the server's key. Used for private set intersection, password-hardening, and privacy-preserving authentication.

PSI (Private Set Intersection)

Cryptographic protocol that allows two parties to compute the intersection of their private sets without revealing elements outside the intersection. Variants include DH-based (commutative encryption via ECDH), OT/OPRF-based (oblivious transfer with cuckoo hashing), circuit-based (garbled circuits for arbitrary functions over matched elements), and FHE-based (homomorphic comparison).

vOPRF (Verifiable OPRF)

Extension of OPRF where the server provides a proof that the output was computed correctly using a committed key, preventing malicious servers from returning arbitrary values. See \[RFC 9497\](https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc9497.html) for the IETF standard.

Identity & Compliance

PCD (Proof-Carrying Data)

Data bundled with a cryptographic proof of its own correctness, enabling portable and composable verifiable credentials.

Sybil Resistance

Preventing a single actor from creating multiple fake identities to gain disproportionate influence in systems that distribute value, votes, or access.

DKIM (DomainKeys Identified Mail)

Email authentication standard where mail servers sign outgoing messages.

ONCHAINID

Decentralized identity system used by ERC-3643 for KYC/eligibility verification

KYC/AML

Know Your Customer/Anti-Money Laundering regulatory compliance requirements

Attestations

Cryptographically signed claims about identities, credentials, or data that can be verified on-chain with minimal disclosure. See \[Pattern: Attestation Verifiable On-Chain\](patterns/pattern-verifiable-attestation.md) for implementation approaches including EAS, W3C Verifiable Credentials, and ONCHAINID.

EAS (Ethereum Attestation Service)

One implementation of on-chain attestation protocol. See attestations pattern for holistic overview.

Crypto-Registry

Regulatory registry for digital asset compliance (eWpG requirement)

Merkle Tree

Cryptographic data structure for efficient membership proofs

Regulatory Frameworks

eWpG

German Electronic Securities Act regulating tokenized securities

MiCA

EU Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation

GENIUS Act

US legislative framework for digital asset regulation

SEC Rule 2a-7

US Securities and Exchange Commission rule governing money market funds, specifying liquidity requirements, portfolio quality, maturity limits, and conditions for liquidity fees and redemption gates

ESMA MMFR (Money Market Fund Regulation)

EU regulation establishing rules for money market funds including daily/weekly maturity limits, stress testing obligations, and reporting to national competent authorities

Post-Quantum Cryptography

CRQC (Cryptographically Relevant Quantum Computer)

Quantum computer capable of running Shor's algorithm at production key sizes, breaking ECDLP, RSA, and pairing-based assumptions.

HNDL (Harvest Now, Decrypt Later)

Attack where an adversary records encrypted data today to decrypt once a CRQC is available. On-chain ciphertexts are immutably stored and capturable by anyone.

ML-KEM

NIST PQ key encapsulation (FIPS 203, formerly Kyber). Lattice-based; replaces ECDH.

ML-DSA

NIST PQ signature scheme (FIPS 204, formerly Dilithium). Lattice-based; replaces ECDSA/EdDSA.

SLH-DSA

NIST hash-based PQ signature (FIPS 205, formerly SPHINCS+). Security relies only on hash function properties.

Poseidon

Arithmetic-friendly hash function for efficient ZK circuit evaluation. No known practical quantum break beyond generic hash-model considerations (e.g., Grover-style security reduction).

Infrastructure

Oracle

External data provider for blockchain smart contracts

Custodian

Financial institution responsible for safeguarding digital assets

No terms match that search.

×

```json
{"@context":"https://schema.org","@graph":[{"@type":"Organization","@id":"https://ethsystems.org/#organization","name":"EthSystems","url":"https://ethsystems.org/","logo":"https://ethsystems.org/icon-maskable.png","sameAs":["https://x.com/eth_systems","https://www.linkedin.com/company/ethsystems/","https://github.com/ethsystems"]},{"@type":"WebSite","@id":"https://ethsystems.org/#website","url":"https://ethsystems.org/","name":"EthSystems","publisher":{"@id":"https://ethsystems.org/#organization"}}]}
```
