Chainlink reported 14 new integrations across 3 services and 8 chains, including ACX, Arbitrum, Base, Concordium, Ethereum, Moonbeam, Plume, Polygon and TRON. ACXChainlink reported 14 new integrations across 3 services and 8 chains, including ACX, Arbitrum, Base, Concordium, Ethereum, Moonbeam, Plume, Polygon and TRON. ACX

Chainlink Expands Adoption With 14 New Integrations Across 8 Blockchains

3 min read
  • Chainlink reported 14 new integrations across 3 services and 8 chains, including ACX, Arbitrum, Base, Concordium, Ethereum, Moonbeam, Plume, Polygon and TRON.
  • ACX said it integrated Chainlink Data Streams, while Chainlink described confidential compute using TEEs and zero-knowledge proofs.

Chainlink has published an adoption update stating that its standard has recorded 14 integrations across three services and eight blockchain networks. The update lists Arbitrum, Base, Concordium, Ethereum, Moonbeam, Plume, Polygon, and TRON as the supported chains, showing activity across both established and newer ecosystems.

Other new integrations listed in the update include decentralized exchanges ACX and ApeX, BitMEX, real-world asset platform Colb Finance, perpetual trading platforms Decibel, Orderly Network and GMTrade, and stock and crypto exchange Hello Trade. 

Others include Lighter, which, as we reported, started the year off with some controversy over its airdrop. Prediction market Opinion, trading platform Monaco and Ethereum-based QuickSwap are also part of the Chainlink family. 

Commenting on the integration, ACX said it has integrated Chainlink Data Streams, describing the choice as part of its trading infrastructure. ACX also referenced product areas it intends to support, including pre-IPO tokenization, markets for community-driven assets, and institutional real-world-asset workflows.

CNF recently covered Chainlink’s launch of a privacy standard designed to keep identity and transaction data confidential while supporting verifiable onchain workflows. The report said the standard is a way to remove privacy barriers that can limit institutions from moving trillions in capital onchain.

In remarks shared alongside the adoption update, founder Sergey Nazarov singled out privacy as a core requirement for traditional finance to operate on public blockchain infrastructure. The explanation focused on a basic constraint in regulated markets, where transaction participants and sensitive datasets are not meant to be visible to the general public, even when systems must remain auditable under specific access rules.

The network’s approach offers a combination of confidentiality and verifiability. The aim is to demonstrate that smart contract logic is executed in the right manner without revealing identities, underlying inputs, and intermediate results. This model aligns with the current financial systems in their management of limited information, where visibility is regulated, and only certain parties can access disclosed information.

To do this, Nazarov indicated that the blockchain is run in parallel with confidential computing. In that application, the chain is used as the settlement layer, and secure calculation is implemented in another execution environment that is not publicly visible.

The private component still needs to produce evidence that can be checked, so users can confirm that the correct operations occurred without seeing the confidential content itself. 

He revealed that the network relies on Trusted Execution Environments and zero-knowledge proofs to verify correctness.

At the time of writing, LINK traded at $11.79, down 2% over 24 hours, with a market cap of $8.35 billion and 24-hour volume near $490.7 million.

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