Today, Brevis and BNB Chain have both made an update to further expand their cooperation aimed at creating next-generation privacy infrastructure in Web3. The project focuses on the adoption of a privacy framework that is configurable and privacy-compliant and can be driven by current zero-knowledge-based technology.
The core of this work is a wider vision: Privacy is a flexible infrastructure component and not a single-purpose tool. The inaugural practical application of this vision will be introduced to the blockchain ecosystem of BNB Chain during the first quarter of 2026 and represents an enormous step forward in the direction of using privacy-saving applications.
Initial crypto privacy protocols were mostly aimed at hiding the information about transactions (e.g., address, receiver, and value). As simple payment privacy, these systems were limited by both the technical capacity of early zero-knowledge proofs, and the capacity to only verify a limited complexity of information with no knowledge of sensitive information.
Consequently, earlier privacy tools were problematic in terms of access control, compliance, and user behavior verification or history. There existed very few flexibility in deciding who could access privacy settings or in what circumstances confidential information could be divulged.
The new framework provided by Brevis and BNB Chain can view privacy in three fundamental dimensions.
This broad definition of privacy opens possibilities of practices, which could not have been practiced before.
Customers were allowed to validate identifications of social or financial sites without displaying wallet trails. The proprietary logic of the market operators could be disclosed without the market operators disclosing the integrity of algorithms. A developer of AI would be able to use his or her own datasets but release only verifiable results.
Access controls coupled with selective disclosure and verifiable computation make privacy a trusted tool and not an adoption barrier.
The Intelligent Privacy Pool designed by Brevis and BNB Chain under the cooperation with 0xbow will be the first attempt to showcase this framework. The pool is constructed based on BNB Chain, which enables users to deposit assets and withdraw them to new addresses, without establishing an on-chain connection between the transactions.
The pool is unique because of its eligibility mechanism. The deposits should be under an approved association that will be privately withdrawn. Users may also evade eligibility by demonstrating sources of compliant on-chain funds, using Brevis zero-knowledge data infrastructure or cryptographically proving possession of a verified account with an exchange using privacy-preserving verification tools.
Controlled intervention mechanisms are also incorporated into the system. In case a deposit turns out to be related to legitimate or ill-intended action later, it may be removed out of the association collection, thus blocking any subsequent personal withdrawals. This would create accountability in such a way that it would not compromise on the privacy of the legitimate users.
With attribute-based proofs, unlinkable transactions and the choice of enforcement paths, Brevis’s Intelligent Privacy Pool is showing how privacy and regulation can coexist on the same platform.


