Zcash (ZEC) is making a concerted effort to restore confidence in its privacy-centric network following a significant exploit scare that triggered a sharp market selloff. After experiencing a price decline of over 50%, developers swiftly acted to patch the network vulnerability. They are now proposing a new system aimed at allowing users to independently verify the cryptocurrency’s circulating supply and enhancing the network’s security protocols.
Zcash Price Rebounds After Exploit Scare and Ironwood Proposal
Last week, Zcash suffered a steep decline of more than 50%, plummeting to $250 after reports of a dangerous counterfeiting bug in its Orchard zero-knowledge proof circuit circulated. This incident rattled investors and led to $116 million in liquidations across the market.
The flaw was discovered by Taylor Hornby, a security researcher, utilizing an AI auditing framework powered by Claude Opus 4.8. Developers indicated that the vulnerability could have allowed an attacker to create fake ZEC tokens within the Orchard pool undetected.
Despite the sharp selloff and subsequent price crash, ZEC’s price rebounded significantly after developers released an emergency fix. CoinMarketCap data indicates that the cryptocurrency recovered over 70%, rising to $433 after the Orchard vulnerability was quickly patched through a coordinated effort involving the Zcash Open Development Lab (ZODL) and other ecosystem participants.
While the team successfully addressed the flaw, concerns linger over whether counterfeit ZEC was created prior to the patch. This issue is particularly unsettling given that the bug had remained undetected within the Zcash network until recently. Although developers assert that exploitation was unlikely, they also acknowledged that Orchard’s privacy features complicate users’ ability to verify whether any counterfeit tokens were minted.
To tackle this challenge, Shielded Labs, a non-profit supporting Zcash, is collaborating with The Zcash Foundation, Tachyon Group, Valar Group, and the ZODL on a proposal known as Ironwood. This initiative aims to restore users’ ability to verify the authenticity of Zcash’s circulating supply without relying on assumptions about other participants or waiting for funds to migrate out of the Orchard pool.
Ironwood Proposal To Restore Zcash Supply Verification
The new proposal was unveiled in a post on June 6, authored by Jason McGee, the founder and former CEO of Zcash, along with Hornby and other contributors.
The primary objective of Ironwood is to empower each user to independently verify Zcash’s supply. Developers explained that once activated, users operating a node would be able to confirm that the circulating supply has not been manipulated.
The proposal also aims to prevent any transaction that attempts to mint new coins in the Orchard pool. Consequently, ZEC would no longer circulate freely within that pool, and funds would only move out through a controlled mechanism.
According to the report, Ironwood could also provide insights into whether the vulnerability was ever exploited during the recent incident. As users transfer funds into a new pool, any potential counterfeiter would face a difficult decision: either attempt to transfer fake coins, risking exposure, or abandon the counterfeit coins.
If no excess ZEC attempts to exit the Orchard pool, it would strongly suggest that the flaw was never exploited. Conversely, if extra funds try to leave, they would be blocked and effectively destroyed, thereby preserving the current circulating supply while publicly demonstrating that counterfeiting had occurred.
