I just used the zkProof verification feature of Succinct, and to be honest, I was a bit amazed. I used to think zero-knowledge proofs were only something understandable in papers, but I didn't expect they really achieved simplicity + usability.

In simple terms, you no longer have to trust whether the data returned by a centralized node is tampered with; Succinct allows you to verify that each step's state is correct, like giving on-chain information a dose of "counterfeit-proof vaccine".

Of course, this isn't some lofty white paper promotion, but I really went through the API myself, wrote a demo in Rust, and it runs quite fast. In the future world of Web3, this kind of infrastructure should be standard, right?

By the way, here's a tag: @Succinct

Friends interested in ZK are welcome to exchange ideas together~

#SuccinctLabs $PROVE