StarkWare’s zero-knowledge prover Stwo comes out of stealth 

Stwo, StarkWare’s latest prover, is designed to significantly reduce latency and transaction costs

article-image

StarkWare Chief Operating Officer Oren Katz | StarkWare modified by Blockworks

share

StarkWare, the company behind scaling solution Starknet, announced at Eth Denver today that it is building Stwo, a zero-knowledge prover designed to reduce latency and transaction costs. 

This new prover will be built open-sourced under the Apache 2.0 license, Oren Katz, the chief operating officer at StarkWare, noted in a press release reviewed by Blockworks. This means that anyone will be able to fork the code, modify and distribute modified versions of the software. 

“Stwo will bring new possibilities for scaling. And they’ll be available for everyone, given that it will be open source from day one,” Katz said.

In the context of blockchain technology, zero-knowledge provers refer to a computation entity responsible for determining whether or not given information is accurate without revealing its underlying data. These provers must create “proofs” that can then be verified by verifiers. 

Read More: How to decentralize a prover, according to an engineer who did it for fun

Stwo will not be the first open-sourced prover that StarkWare has developed. Currently, the public Starknet blockchain and Starknet app chains use its first-generation prover called Stone. 

Katz notes that Stwo will be an evolution to the Stone prover thanks to the Circle Stark protocol that Starkware developed in partnership with Polygon.

According to StarkWare, Circle Stark protocol’s Circle STARK proofs increase the efficiency of existing STARKs. STARKS on Starknet are considered under the same classification as validity proofs on other zero-knowledge blockchains, which are used to attest to the validity of a specific state. 

“Stwo is an evolution of the Stone prover because the Circle Stark protocol circumvents the constraints imposed by the classic STARK protocol. These constraints previously prevented STARK from being used efficiently for smaller fields,” Katz said.


Get the news in your inbox. Explore Blockworks newsletters:

Tags

Decoding crypto and the markets. Daily, with Byron Gilliam.

Upcoming Events

Hilton Park Lane

Tues - Wed, November 10 - 11, 2026

DAS London is a two-day summit at the Hilton Park Lane in London featuring conversations between the builders, allocators, and policy makers who are shaping the trajectory of the digital asset ecosystem in the UK, Europe, and North America.

Marina Bay Sands Singapore

Wednesday, October 07, 2026

DAS Asia is a a single-day summit at Marina Bay Sands Singapore featuring conversations between the builders, investors, and global leaders are shaping the trajectory of the digital asset ecosystem in Asia & North America.

recent research

Black Generic.png

Research

Compute demand is two-sided, the precondition for any hedging market. Producers (neoclouds and independent data centers) fear their inventory clears below cost. Consumers (inference platforms and the agentic application layer) fear compute will get more expensive. The common read holds that nonfungibility keeps both off any general exchange, since a buyer wants a named SKU in a named region rather than a basket, so the trade stays bilateral and the only exchange users are dealers hedging their book. That describes launch conditions, but understates how commodity markets form. Canonical benchmarks get made through trading, and reservations standardize as the curve deepens. The dealer-intermediated structure is not the end state, it is the seed of one.

Newsletter

The Breakdown

Decoding crypto and the markets. Daily, with Byron Gilliam.

Blockworks Research

Unlock crypto's most powerful research platform.

Our research packs a punch and gives you actionable takeaways for each topic.

SubscribeGet in touch

Blockworks Inc.

133 W 19th St., New York, NY 10011

Blockworks Network

NewsPodcastsNewslettersEventsRoundtablesAnalytics