Balaji Srinivasan has distilled 15 years of crypto experimentation down to a stark claim: after Bitcoin, only two core protocol breakthroughs truly matter—Ethereum for programmability and Zcash for privacy. In a wide-ranging appearance on Mert Mumtaz’s “Accelerate with Mert” podcast, Srinivasan argued that the industry has already completed the “programmability era” and is now entering […]Balaji Srinivasan has distilled 15 years of crypto experimentation down to a stark claim: after Bitcoin, only two core protocol breakthroughs truly matter—Ethereum for programmability and Zcash for privacy. In a wide-ranging appearance on Mert Mumtaz’s “Accelerate with Mert” podcast, Srinivasan argued that the industry has already completed the “programmability era” and is now entering […]

Ethereum and Zcash Are Crypto’s True Innovations Post Bitcoin, Says Balaji

2025/11/14 02:00
3 min read

Balaji Srinivasan has distilled 15 years of crypto experimentation down to a stark claim: after Bitcoin, only two core protocol breakthroughs truly matter—Ethereum for programmability and Zcash for privacy.

In a wide-ranging appearance on Mert Mumtaz’s “Accelerate with Mert” podcast, Srinivasan argued that the industry has already completed the “programmability era” and is now entering a decisive phase where privacy and zero-knowledge cryptography become central to crypto’s mission. “The two major innovations on Bitcoin were programmability in the form of Ethereum and privacy in the form of Zcash,” he said.

From Bitcoin To Programmability To Zcash

Srinivasan breaks crypto’s history into three arcs. First, Bitcoin simply had to prove that non-sovereign, cryptographic money could work at all. Then, Ethereum generalized that into a programmable platform with smart contracts, stablecoins, NFTs, DEXs and on-chain capital markets.

By now, he argued, that second phase is effectively validated. “We now have scalable on-chain smart contracts that can support [a] large number of users, large numbers of transactions with finality. There’s multiple good chains. It works. It runs 24/7,” he said, noting that crypto is already functioning in developing markets: “In Bolivia, they quote prices in Tether. In Nigeria, they save in Bitcoin. This stuff is no longer theory. It’s actually there.”

The next phase, he says, is privacy by design. “Now the next eight years… privacy,” Srinivasan said. “Taking everything we just did and encrypting it using ZK.” That includes ZK-based KYC (“ZKYC”), privacy-preserving DEXs, and smart contracts that reveal only the minimum necessary information. He pointed to industry work showing how traditional KYC could be replicated with zero-knowledge proofs: “If you nail ZK then you can replace the entire [compliance] system.”

This is where Zcash matters: not as a marketing brand, but as the first mainstream proof that advanced zero-knowledge privacy can be embedded at the protocol level. Ethereum represents programmability; Zcash represents privacy. In Srinivasan’s framing, the future is about merging those ideas—Ethereum-style expressivity with Zcash-style cryptographic concealment—across L1s, rollups and application-specific systems.

Srinivasan pushed back hard on the idea that crypto is now primarily a speculative or commercial arena. “Crypto isn’t just about the commercial part,” he said. “It’s about the ideological part. It’s about the fact that the banks have failed. It’s about the fact the political system has failed. It’s about the fact that we need an exit. It’s about the fact that we need self-sovereignty. And the missing part of that is privacy.”

He compared this to the way Christmas is often defended by religious believers as more than shopping and Santa. “Remember the reason for the season” becomes, in his telling, a reminder that crypto’s “season” is about exit and self-sovereignty, not just yield, DeFi and token prices. Privacy, he argued, is what reconnects modern “commercial crypto” to those original cypherpunk and anti-censorship roots.

Notably, Srinivasan is a long-time advocate for ZK based technologies. In November 2024, he wrote via X: “Yes, Zcash is great and it’s already fit for purpose. One can continue using it for private transactions. But ZK is to encryption what the transformer is to AI. It generalizes many special case hacks into a new compute paradigm. We will get a ZK economy. So we do want a chain with ZK primitives in addition to a simple Zcash-like chain.”

At press time, ZCash traded at $501.59.

Zcash price
Market Opportunity
Core DAO Logo
Core DAO Price(CORE)
$0.08306
$0.08306$0.08306
-4.71%
USD
Core DAO (CORE) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Trump insiders privately mock 'far-fetched' plan to use luxury jet for deportations

Trump insiders privately mock 'far-fetched' plan to use luxury jet for deportations

Scandal-plagued Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem is facing yet another accusation that taxpayer dollars are helping create a lavish lifestyle for her in
Share
Alternet2026/02/19 20:55
Fed Decides On Interest Rates Today—Here’s What To Watch For

Fed Decides On Interest Rates Today—Here’s What To Watch For

The post Fed Decides On Interest Rates Today—Here’s What To Watch For appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Topline The Federal Reserve on Wednesday will conclude a two-day policymaking meeting and release a decision on whether to lower interest rates—following months of pressure and criticism from President Donald Trump—and potentially signal whether additional cuts are on the way. President Donald Trump has urged the central bank to “CUT INTEREST RATES, NOW, AND BIGGER” than they might plan to. Getty Images Key Facts The central bank is poised to cut interest rates by at least a quarter-point, down from the 4.25% to 4.5% range where they have been held since December to between 4% and 4.25%, as Wall Street has placed 100% odds of a rate cut, according to CME’s FedWatch, with higher odds (94%) on a quarter-point cut than a half-point (6%) reduction. Fed governors Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman, both Trump appointees, voted in July for a quarter-point reduction to rates, and they may dissent again in favor of a large cut alongside Stephen Miran, Trump’s Council of Economic Advisers’ chair, who was sworn in at the meeting’s start on Tuesday. It’s unclear whether other policymakers, including Kansas City Fed President Jeffrey Schmid and St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem, will favor larger cuts or opt for no reduction. Fed Chair Jerome Powell said in his Jackson Hole, Wyoming, address last month the central bank would likely consider a looser monetary policy, noting the “shifting balance of risks” on the U.S. economy “may warrant adjusting our policy stance.” David Mericle, an economist for Goldman Sachs, wrote in a note the “key question” for the Fed’s meeting is whether policymakers signal “this is likely the first in a series of consecutive cuts” as the central bank is anticipated to “acknowledge the softening in the labor market,” though they may not “nod to an October cut.” Mericle said he…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:23
Coinbase Slams ‘Patchwork’ State Crypto Laws, Calls for Federal Preemption

Coinbase Slams ‘Patchwork’ State Crypto Laws, Calls for Federal Preemption

The post Coinbase Slams ‘Patchwork’ State Crypto Laws, Calls for Federal Preemption appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In brief Coinbase has filed a letter with the DOJ urging federal preemption of state crypto laws, citing Oregon’s securities suit, New York’s ETH stance, and staking bans. Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal called state actions “government run amok,” warning that patchwork enforcement “slows innovation and harms consumers.” A legal expert told Decrypt that states risk violating interstate commerce rules and due process, and DOJ support for preemption may mark a potential turning point. Coinbase has gone on the offensive against state regulators, petitioning the Department of Justice that a patchwork of lawsuits and licensing schemes is tearing America’s crypto market apart. “When Oregon can sue us for services that are legal under federal law, something’s broken,” Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal tweeted on Tuesday. “This isn’t federalism—this is government run amok.” When Oregon can sue us for services that are legal under federal law, something’s broken. This isn’t federalism–this is government run amok. We just sent a letter to @TheJusticeDept urging federal action on crypto market structure to remedy this. 1/3 — paulgrewal.eth (@iampaulgrewal) September 16, 2025 Coinbase’s filing says that states are “expansively interpreting their securities laws in ways that undermine federal law” and violate the dormant Commerce Clause by projecting regulatory preferences beyond state borders. “The current patchwork of state laws isn’t just inefficient – it slows innovation and harms consumers” and demands “federal action on crypto market structure,” Grewal said.  States vs. Coinbase It pointed to Oregon’s securities lawsuit against the exchange, New York’s bid to classify Ethereum as a security, and cease-and-desist orders on staking as proof that rogue states are trying to resurrect the SEC’s discredited “regulation by enforcement” playbook. Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield sued Coinbase in April for promoting unregistered securities, and in July asked a federal judge to return the…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 11:52