Privacy has long been the Achilles’ heel of public blockchain infrastructure. While modular rollups have unlocked new heights in scalability and customization, transaction confidentiality remains a challenge – especially for enterprises and developers seeking to build privacy-preserving applications on-chain. The recent partnership between Conduit and Zama is poised to change this dynamic, bringing fully homomorphic encryption (FHE) directly into the modular rollup stack.

Why Privacy Matters for Modular Rollups
Rollups like those powered by Conduit have already transformed Ethereum scaling, offering lower fees and higher throughput. But as decentralized finance (DeFi), gaming, and enterprise use cases mature, the need for confidential computation grows urgent. Imagine a world where you can execute smart contracts on sensitive data – medical records, financial transactions, proprietary algorithms – without ever exposing that data to validators or the public.
This is where FHE comes in. Unlike zero-knowledge proofs (which prove knowledge without revealing data), FHE allows computations to be performed directly on encrypted data. The result? Data remains private throughout its lifecycle on-chain, yet smart contracts can still process it as needed. Until now, integrating FHE at scale in blockchain environments was more theoretical than practical. The Conduit-Zama partnership changes that equation.
The Mechanics of Conduit x Zama: Confidential Smart Contracts at Scale
Zama’s FHE technology is purpose-built for modular blockchains. By running a dedicated Arbitrum rollup for the Zama Protocol – powered by Conduit’s cloud-native rollup infrastructure – they’re demonstrating how privacy can be embedded natively into L2 solutions without sacrificing performance or cost efficiency. This isn’t just an academic exercise: with over $1.2 billion in total value locked (TVL) across 300 and mainnet and testnet rollups supported by Conduit, the impact is real and immediate.
Here’s how it works:
- Zama provides FHE as a service layer, allowing any blockchain application to process encrypted inputs via smart contracts.
- Conduit supplies robust deployment infrastructure, ensuring that these privacy-preserving computations run efficiently at scale with enterprise-grade security monitoring.
- The Zama Protocol’s dedicated chain executes parallel FHE operations, relaying encrypted yet verifiable results back to host chains like Arbitrum or Celestia.
- Soon, all Conduit chains will access confidential computing through the Conduit Marketplace, making it as easy as toggling a feature flag to enable privacy in your own modular rollup deployment.
The Competitive Edge: Why FHE Rollups Outpace Other Privacy Solutions
You might be wondering how this approach compares to zero-knowledge (zk) rollups or other cryptographic privacy tools already gaining traction in web3. While zk-rollups excel at proving statements about data without revealing it, they don’t allow arbitrary computation on encrypted inputs; FHE does. This means developers can build entire classes of confidential DeFi protocols, voting systems, or even AI-powered dApps that operate on private user data while remaining fully composable within existing EVM ecosystems.
The modular nature of both Zama’s architecture and Conduit’s infrastructure ensures seamless integration across custom forks, pre-compiles, and enterprise chains – all while maintaining compliance standards critical for regulated industries. It’s not just about keeping secrets; it’s about unleashing new business models that simply weren’t possible before.
For developers, the implications are massive. With FHE rollups, you can finally build smart contracts that treat privacy as a default, not an afterthought. Imagine launching on-chain lending where collateral details remain confidential, or running healthcare registries where patient records are never exposed yet remain verifiable. The pathway from theory to production has never been clearer, thanks to Conduit and Zama’s combined approach.
One of the most exciting aspects of this integration is how it democratizes access to advanced cryptography. Previously, implementing FHE required deep expertise and custom infrastructure; now, any team deploying a modular rollup through Conduit can opt-in to Zama’s confidential computing layer via the Conduit Marketplace. This plug-and-play model removes friction and accelerates the adoption of privacy-preserving applications across DeFi, gaming, enterprise SaaS, and beyond.
What’s Next? The Roadmap for Privacy-Preserving Modular Rollups
With Zama’s mainnet launch on the horizon, we’re about to see an explosion of use cases for confidential smart contracts across multiple ecosystems. All Conduit-supported chains, whether on Arbitrum or Celestia, will soon have native access to FHE-powered privacy features without compromising composability or performance.
This means more than just incremental improvements in user privacy. We’re talking about a paradigm shift: compliance-friendly DeFi protocols that don’t leak user data; DAO voting systems where ballots are tallied without revealing individual choices; cross-chain bridges that keep transaction details hidden yet auditable. The modular stack makes it possible to deploy these innovations at scale while maintaining the agility developers expect from modern blockchain infrastructure.
Still have questions about how FHE integrates into your rollup project? Or want to know whether this tech is right for your use case? Check out our detailed technical breakdown here: How Zama’s FHE Integration with Conduit Is Enabling Confidential Smart Contracts for Rollups.
The bottom line: as regulatory pressure mounts and users demand stronger data protection, privacy-preserving rollups will define the next wave of web3 innovation. Thanks to the partnership between Conduit and Zama, and their focus on practical deployment, the future of confidential smart contracts is not just possible, it’s already being built today.
