Zero Knowledge (ZK) Jobs

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Job Position Company Posted Location Salary Tags

Gevulot

Remote

Ether.Fi

Denver, CO, United States

$120k - $180k

Matter Labs

Remote

$81k - $150k

O(1) Labs

Remote

$72k - $77k

Harmony

Palo Alto, CA, United States

$81k - $102k

Harmony

Palo Alto, CA, United States

$31k - $90k

Harmony

Palo Alto, CA, United States

$72k - $112k

Nethermind

London, United Kingdom

$105k - $150k

ZKPASS FOUNDATION

Remote

$120k - $150k

Polygon Labs

Remote

$63k - $107k

NIL (CYPRUS) LTD

Lima, Peru

$91k - $180k

Manta Network, Powered by p0x labs

Remote

$32k - $81k

Polygon Labs

Remote

$90k - $100k

Asymmetric Research

Remote

$126k - $138k

Figment

New York, NY, United States

$90k - $130k

Head of Developer Relations

Gevulot

This job is closed

What we're looking for

 
We are looking for a Head of Developer Relations to work closely with our partners facilitating seamless integrations and fostering a thriving ecosystem. Your goal in this position would be to actively communicate and provide technical guidance to third-party developers on Gevulot. We are looking for a person who has proven experience in similar roles and is a systematic communicator with up to hundreds of entities at once. You would be working closely with our engineering team to ensure the needs of our partners are met. You are familiar and native to the crypto ecosystem and are familiar with the zk-industry and the industry-specific communication style.
 

Responsibilities

 

  • Offer expert technical assistance, troubleshooting FAQ, and best practices to third-party developers building on Gevulot, helping them navigate the intricacies of integrations and optimizing their implementations for maximum efficiency and effectiveness 
    • This includes collaboration with our engineering team to resolve technical issues and address developer feedback effectively
  • Cultivate and foster a vibrant developer community through Crypto Twitter, Discord, Telegram, online forums, meetups, hackathons, and events to promote partnership collaboration and socials growth
  • Create technical resources and contribute to our community with developer blog posts, tutorials, sample code, tutorials, videos, and other educational resources to help developers understand and utilize Gevulot effectively
  • Gather feedback, identify pain points, understand the user experience, analyze trends, and help our engineers prioritize features to drive product improvements within our organization
  • Actively engage with new partners, external developers, and varying regional communities to expand our ecosystem and drive adoption

Qualifications

 

  • Minimum 3+ years of experience in a Developer Relations / Developer Advocate role or similar
  • Proven growth from your own Twitter account and activity
  • Solid understanding of cryptographic principles and familiarity with zero-knowledge proofs (ZK), along with the ability to grasp technical details quickly and provide meaningful guidance to developers
  • Strong relationship-building skills, with the ability to establish rapport and trust with developers, partners, and internal stakeholders alike
  • A strategic mindset with the ability to proactively identify opportunities for growth and improvement, develop actionable plans, and execute effectively to achieve desired outcomes
  • A genuine passion for fostering vibrant developer communities and driving collaborative innovation in the technology industry
  • Ability to quickly learn complex systems
  • Exceptional English communication skills, with the ability to articulate complex technical concepts clearly and concisely to diverse audiences, ranging from individual developers to large-scale partners
  • Customer-facing attitude, you want to make life of others easier

Preferred Skills

 

  • Experience with a wide range of technologies, solutions, and blockchain ecosystems
  • Obsess about finding new ways to explain and simplify hard problems
  • Go-getter mentality

Stack

 

  • Understanding of wide range of technologies for easy troubleshooting
  • Go
  • Rust
  • Linux

What we offer

 

  • Fully remote position
  • Competitive salary
  • Significant responsibility from day 1
  • Fast growth environment with opportunities for professional development
  • Opportunity to work on the cutting edge of Zero Knowledge infrastructure
  • Opportunity to gain experience in the blockchain industry and development without prior industry experience
 


What is Zero-knowledge?

Zero-knowledge is a concept in cryptography that allows two parties to exchange information without revealing any additional information beyond what is necessary to prove a particular fact

In other words, zero-knowledge is a way of proving something without actually revealing any details about the proof

Here are some examples of zero-knowledge:

  1. Password authentication: When you enter your password to log into an online account, the server doesn't actually know your password. Instead, it checks to see if the hash of your password matches the stored hash in its database. This is a form of zero-knowledge because the server doesn't know your actual password, just the hash that proves you know the correct password.
  2. Sudoku puzzles: Suppose you want to prove to someone that you've solved a particularly difficult Sudoku puzzle. You could do this by providing them with the completed puzzle, but that would reveal how you solved it. Instead, you could use a zero-knowledge proof where you demonstrate that you know the solution without actually revealing the solution itself.
  3. Bitcoin transactions: In a Bitcoin transaction, you prove that you have ownership of a certain amount of Bitcoin without revealing your private key. This is done using a zero-knowledge proof called a Schnorr signature, which allows you to prove ownership of a specific transaction output without revealing the private key associated with that output.
  4. Secure messaging: In a secure messaging app, you can prove to your contacts that you have access to a shared secret without revealing the secret itself. This is done using a zero-knowledge proof, which allows you to prove that you have access to the secret without actually revealing what the secret is.