TechFlow news — Privacy-preserving AI network PlatON has announced the official launch of its secure multi-party computation ceremony, Lumino. Participants can join the PlatON ecosystem in a decentralized manner. The Lumino ceremony consists of two computational groups, based on different underlying cryptographic configurations. Participants may choose to join one or both groups. Computations will be executed sequentially. Once the ceremony begins, participants run an open-source client software and complete the computation within several hours. Participants can join at any time after the ceremony starts. Depending on individual hardware and bandwidth conditions, running the client typically takes between 1 to 10 hours. Additionally, the system allocates a 15-hour window for each participant to encourage timely completion of the task. The organizing team will apply a verifiable computation paradigm for every participant who runs the client software.
Lumino employs a secure multi-party computation protocol and is dedicated to building infrastructure for privacy-preserving applications based on zk-SNARKs. The generated parameters are not only applicable to Alaya and PlatON but will also serve as public resources for any decentralized cryptographic application utilizing zero-knowledge proof technology.




