News linked to both this project and an event.
According to Cointelegraph, Aptos recently launched its privacy token, Confidential APT, on the mainnet. Confidential APT is pegged 1:1 to APT and uses zero-knowledge proofs to conceal token balances and transfer amounts, while preserving wallet address visibility and transaction verifiability. Sherry Xiao, founding engineer at Aptos Labs, stated that the token aims to resolve the long-standing tension between blockchain privacy and regulatory transparency, and can mitigate sensitive on-chain information exposure—such as payroll distributions, treasury operations, and trading strategies. From a compliance perspective, enabling audit keys requires approval via on-chain governance voting. The launch of Confidential APT follows a governance proposal that passed with near-unanimous support. Xiao expects individual users to adopt the token more rapidly than enterprises; if the mainnet operates stably for six months and demonstrates strong trading volume, it could help shorten the sales cycle for enterprise adoption.
According to an official announcement, Aave Labs has launched Aave Checkpoint—a governance security system powered by AI—to conduct structured, multi-layered reviews of governance proposals and payloads before they are executed on-chain. The system has been operational since March 2026 and has covered all governance proposals during that period. Aave Checkpoint combines automated analysis with mandatory manual review: it fetches on-chain payload data, proposal source code, and IPFS-hosted text, then cross-references Seatbelt simulation results to examine execution paths, state changes, and potential risks—generating audit reports accordingly. Each AI-generated report must be signed off by at least two independent reviewers before the review is finalized. Currently, the system supports Aave V3, V4, GHO, and Aptos-v3.