At each node of this network, calculations are performed before the user pulls all the constituent parts back together. The nodes, en masse, can collective do the thinking, even without seeing the rest of the orginal data. The system uses the same anti-fraud record that's found in the bitcoin blockchain. As mentioned in Wired, this could lead to some very interesting conclusions: a search engine request that returns results, but never sees the user's original search, the ability to share sensitive medical data with medical companies and advertisers without privacy risks. Oz Nathan, Enigma's co-creator said:"No one wants to give their data to some company when you don't know what they'll do with it."

"But if you have guaranteed privacy, data analysis can be a lot more powerful. People will actually be willing to share more." Another notable part of this system is that computational power needed is less than 100 times that of the unencrypted calculation. They hope to reduce this to around just ten times the processing power.