,

Venn Network Aims to Solve DeFi’s Hacking Problem With More Decentralized Tech

Can decentralized finance (DeFi) address its hacking problem with another layer of decentralized tech? Israeli cybersecurity firm Ironblocks’ new network is betting on it.

On Wednesday, the firm is beginning a phased roll-out of a new Web3 security layer it’s developing, called Venn. The transaction pre-screening network seeks to create “a new economy” for crypto security, said creator Or Dadosh, also Ironblocks’ CEO.

Bitcoin Open Interest Hits Record High Amid BTC Price Surge

01:50

Bitcoin Open Interest Hits Record High Amid BTC Price Surge

Bitcoin Leaps Across $71K, Eyes All-Time High; DOGE Futures Interest Nears Record

02:41

Bitcoin Leaps Across $71K, Eyes All-Time High; DOGE Futures Interest Nears Record

Sliding Copper-to-Gold Ratio Presents Bitcoin Bear Case

01:33

Sliding Copper-to-Gold Ratio Presents Bitcoin Bear Case

Tether Denies U.S. Probe; MicroStrategy Premium is 'Unsustainable': Report

02:21

Tether Denies U.S. Probe; MicroStrategy Premium is ‘Unsustainable’: Report

Venn plans to match security operators and their technical know-how with crypto apps that want extra eyes on their transaction flow. A participating DeFi app might pay out crypto rewards to auditors and cybersecurity firms who vet pending transactions, Dadosh said.

All this happens before any crypto transaction actually executes. In the Venn model, pending trades, swaps, borrows and transfers pass through its network first. Security operators flag and freeze any suspicious actions. They forward regular activity onto the blockchain for confirmation.

“It’s just like a firewall in the Web2 world,” Dadosh said.

DeFi heavy hitters including Ether.Fi and Ethena are joining Venn’s public testnet, according to Dadosh. A bevy of security firms are, too. The network itself will be distributed across the firms, who act as node operators.

Edited by Sheldon Reback.