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The Privacy Cluster is a coordinated research and development initiative launched by the Ethereum Foundation on October 8, 2025, to integrate privacy as a core feature of the Ethereum ecosystem. [1] [2] The initiative consolidates and expands upon existing privacy-focused work, uniting a team of researchers, engineers, and cryptographers to build open-source tools and standards. Its mission is to make privacy a "first-class property" of Ethereum, ensuring the network can be used safely and credibly by individuals, developers, and institutions. [1] [3]
The Privacy Cluster represents a formalization of the Ethereum Foundation's long-term commitment to privacy, elevating it to a core pillar of the Ethereum roadmap alongside scalability and security. [1] [2] The initiative was established to address the inherent transparency of public blockchains, which, while beneficial for auditing, exposes sensitive user and institutional data. The Foundation's stated motivation is that widespread adoption requires giving users the option to transact, govern, and build applications without this exposure. [2] The cluster also serves as a response to growing concerns around global surveillance and increasing regulatory pressures on the cryptocurrency industry. [4]
The guiding philosophy of the initiative is summarized by the principle that "credible neutrality, security, and openness are much more valuable to humanity when paired with privacy." [1] The cluster's work is encapsulated in the slogan, "Privacy is normal," reflecting its goal to make the use of privacy-enhancing technologies a seamless and default experience for all users. [1]
The initiative employs a full-stack approach, developing solutions that span the entire technology stack. This includes pioneering new cryptographic methods at the research frontier, informing how confidentiality can be embedded into Ethereum's core protocol, building application-layer tools and primitives, improving the user experience (UX) of privacy protocols, and developing specifications for institutional and regulated use cases. [1] [5]
The groundwork for the Privacy Cluster was laid in 2018 with the establishment of the Ethereum Foundation's Privacy and Scaling Explorations (PSE) team, initially known as the "Privacy Stewards of Ethereum." [1] [5] This team focused on early-stage research and development in applied cryptography, creating numerous open-source privacy tools and primitives that became foundational to the Ethereum ecosystem. Over the years, the PSE team built over 50 open-source projects, and its code repositories were forked thousands of times, indicating wide adoption of its research. [1]
Prior to the official launch of the full initiative, the Ethereum Foundation announced the new leadership structure for its privacy efforts on October 1, 2025. This established a two-tiered structure with coordinators for the overarching "Privacy @ EF" cluster and the embedded PSE team, signaling a move to make its privacy work more "impactful, coherent, and accountable." [6]
On October 8, 2025, the Ethereum Foundation officially announced the formation of the Privacy Cluster in a blog post titled "Our Commitment to Privacy." [1] This announcement marked a significant expansion and formalization of the Foundation's privacy efforts, consolidating the ongoing work of the PSE team and launching new, coordinated initiatives. The move was widely reported by crypto and tech media on October 9, 2025, and was interpreted as cementing privacy's role as a formal part of the Ethereum roadmap. [2] [5]
The Privacy Cluster is an internal initiative of the Ethereum Foundation, comprising a diverse team of 47 top researchers, engineers, coordinators, and cryptographers. [1] [4]
The Privacy Cluster is organized into several key initiatives that build upon existing work and introduce new areas of focus. [1]
The PSE team is the foundational research and development arm of the Privacy Cluster. It continues its original mission of pioneering applied cryptography and creating open-source privacy tools. Internally, the PSE team is organized across four main divisions: Research, Product, Engineering, and Operations. [6] Its work serves as a reference point for many other projects both inside and outside the cluster. [1] [2]
The IPTF is a new, multidisciplinary group created to bridge the gap between institutions and the public Ethereum ecosystem. Its primary function is to translate the regulatory and operational requirements of large enterprises into concrete technical privacy specifications. The task force aims to help institutions solve real-world problems on public blockchains by providing them with compliant privacy solutions. Its target business areas include Real World Assets (RWA), funds and assets, payments, trading, oracles, and compliance. [1] [3]
Kohaku is another new project launched under the Privacy Cluster, specifically focused on creating user-facing privacy tools. It consists of two main components: a reference implementation of a new privacy-preserving wallet and an open-source wallet Software Development Kit (SDK). The SDK is designed to help developers easily integrate strong cryptography into their own applications. The ultimate goal of Kohaku is to make the use of advanced privacy features feel normal and accessible to all users. A public roadmap for Kohaku is available. [1] [2]
The work of the Privacy Cluster is heavily centered on applied cryptography, with a strong emphasis on zero-knowledge proofs (ZKPs). [1] Other core technologies mentioned include confidential transactions and decentralized identity solutions. [4] The architectural goal is to embed these privacy-enhancing technologies directly into Ethereum's Layer-1 core, providing a more robust and holistic solution than relying purely on Layer-2 or application-level privacy. [4]
The cluster's research is organized into several key domains, including three core pillars for the PSE team:
The Privacy Cluster oversees and builds upon several key open-source primitives developed by the PSE team: