Polygon’s zero-knowledge scaling arm, Polygon Zero, is accusing developers of Matter Labs of copy-pasting “a substantial amount of source code” from its Plonky2 library, according to an announcement on Aug. 3.
The allegedly plagiarized code was found on zkSync, a competitor layer-2 scaling solution for Ethereum powered by zero-knowledge technology. Matter Labs is the developer of the zkSync ecosystem.
According to Polygon Zero, Matter Labs recently released a proving system called Boojum with lots of code copy-pasted from critical components of its recursive SNARK Plonky2. A recursive SNARK is a cryptographic proof that allows one party (the prover) to demonstrate to another party (the verifier) that a certain statement is true, without revealing any additional information.
Crypto runs on the open source ethos. When projects don’t follow it, the ecosystem suffers.We were disappointed to see that @zksync copied our code without attribution and made misleading claims about the original work, so we wrote this post.https://t.co/8VnoYVWgI8
Polygon Zero claims that the code was included without the original copyrights or clear attribution to the original authors. It also noted that Boojum is extremely similar to Plonky2’s library. “It uses the same strategy of parallel repetition to boost soundness in a small field, similar custom gates to efficiently arithmetize recursive verification, and the same lookup argument developed by our teammate Ulrich Haböck," reads the blog post.
Furthermore, Polygon noted that Matter Labs has marketed Boojum as 10x faster than Plonky2. “Wondering how this is possible, given that the performance-critical field arithmetic code is directly copied from Plonky2?”
According to Polygon Zero:
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