Flux
  • Background
    • Background: Web3 Grew, the Data Layer Didn’t
  • What Flux Does
    • What Flux Brings That Was Missing
      • What Flux Does: System capabilities, not implementation
    • A Modular Workflow for Verifiable Data
    • The System Behind Sub-Second Proofs
    • More Than Access: Integrity, Speed, and Structure
    • Beyond Code: Participation and Control
  • Tokenomics
    • Tokenomics
      • Utility
      • Allocation
  • Roadmap
    • Roadmap
  • FAQ
    • FAQ
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  1. What Flux Does

What Flux Brings That Was Missing

Flux is a verifiable data execution network built for Web3. It enables developers and systems to access structured, cross-chain data along with cryptographic proofs of correctness, without relying on trusted intermediaries.

Unlike RPC endpoints or indexers, Flux treats each query as a verifiable computation. The output is not just data, but a mathematically provable result—verified against source data, logic, and execution context.

Flux does not aim to replace all data infrastructure. Instead, it focuses on high-integrity use cases—where automation, precision, and onchain integration are non-negotiable. It fills a structural void in the blockchain stack: the ability to prove that data is not only available, but correct.

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Last updated 14 days ago