Automata Network, a well-known forum that offers private web facilities to Web3-based dApps, recently announced an exclusive development. According to the company, it has joined forces with Puffer Finance (a repossession tool that streamlines the cash repossession process) to operate on Secure Signer. The company went to X to reveal the news of this partnership.
I’m very happy to work with @puffer_finance on Secure-Signer to protect staking workflows using secure hardware ✧
Secure-Signer uses Trusted Execution Environments (TEEs) and is the recipient of an @ethereum foundation grant.
Tap ↓https://t.co/Ne5uefiiL6
— Automata Network – 2.0 (@AutomataNetwork) May 27, 2024
Automata and Puffer are teaming up for joint work on SGX-based Secure-Signer
In addition to the announcement on the social media platform, the company also published a blog post on its website. It noted in its blog post that the platform will contribute to the Secure-Signer and promote its development. Puffer is reportedly providing a grant for the project in question. According to Automata, Puffer works as an anti-slashing tool for remote signing. It reportedly uses Trusted Execution Environments (TEEs).
In addition, it also works as a recipient of an Ethereum Foundation Grant. Automata pointed out that Secure-Signer currently operates in a secure enclave Intel SGX that uses smart contracts for Remote Attestation Verification. The project uses them to remotely verify the SGX certificates in the chain. As the reports indicate, Intel has a strategy to deprecate Enhanced Privacy ID early next year.
It will then base subsequent attestation workflows on Data Center Attestation Primitives. In the case of DCAP attestations, Automata has reportedly made available a verifier on Solidity open source. Solidity runs as a resilient programming language that developers use to build dApps for the largest developer ecosystems. Validators participate in the coordination and consensus of a protocol.
Validators can control multiple nodes with one key to avoid downtime penalties
In addition, they are mainly concerned with signing only non-slashable messages and optimizing uptime. With that in mind, if a validator breaks network rules, the platform can impose a financial penalty. Therefore, the validators who want to avoid downtime penalties can operate multiple nodes while using the same key. The platform assured that it would continue to work closely with the team behind Puffer.
In this way, it will reportedly contribute to enriching the development and work on Secure-Signer. Additionally, it added that Puffer has additionally secured Automata’s Multi-Prover AVS with over 18,000 $ETH tokens being redeployed. In this regard, Automata’s AVS is among the first projects on the liquid recovery forum.