According to Deep Tide TechFlow news on June 13, reported by Cointelegraph, Deutsche Telekom, Alibaba Cloud, Bahrain STC, and Vodafone’s Pairpoint have joined Nillion’s newly launched “Enterprise Cluster” program and are running infrastructure nodes on its decentralized computing platform.
The enterprise cluster plan aims to extend decentralized applications beyond cryptocurrency, focusing on privacy-sensitive areas such as healthcare, financial management, and enterprise data sharing. Nillion’s core technology “blind computing” allows encrypted data to be processed without decryption.
Miguel de Vega, co-founder and chief scientist of Nillion, stated that the technology enables organizations to compute encrypted data on decentralized clusters for the first time without sacrificing privacy, proving that privacy-first computing has become enterprise-level infrastructure.
It is reported that Nillion raised $25 million in funding last October, bringing its total financing to $50 million.
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Companies such as Deutsche Telekom, Alibaba Cloud, and Vodafone have joined the Nillion operating nodes.
According to Deep Tide TechFlow news on June 13, reported by Cointelegraph, Deutsche Telekom, Alibaba Cloud, Bahrain STC, and Vodafone’s Pairpoint have joined Nillion’s newly launched “Enterprise Cluster” program and are running infrastructure nodes on its decentralized computing platform.
The enterprise cluster plan aims to extend decentralized applications beyond cryptocurrency, focusing on privacy-sensitive areas such as healthcare, financial management, and enterprise data sharing. Nillion’s core technology “blind computing” allows encrypted data to be processed without decryption.
Miguel de Vega, co-founder and chief scientist of Nillion, stated that the technology enables organizations to compute encrypted data on decentralized clusters for the first time without sacrificing privacy, proving that privacy-first computing has become enterprise-level infrastructure.
It is reported that Nillion raised $25 million in funding last October, bringing its total financing to $50 million.