- Lambda256 and CertiK have signed a strategic MOU to expand blockchain security and compliance services in Korea and APAC.
- The partnership will combine CertiK’s risk intelligence tools with Lambda256’s enterprise blockchain infrastructure.
Lambda256, the blockchain technology subsidiary of Dunamu, has signed a strategic Memorandum of Understanding with CertiK to strengthen digital asset security and compliance infrastructure across Korea and the wider APAC region.
The agreement makes Lambda256 an official distributor and channel partner for CertiK’s security and compliance products, including CertiK SkyInsights and CertiK AI Auditor. The two companies will target enterprises, financial institutions and virtual asset service providers, a segment where regulatory pressure is rising quickly and security expectations are no longer a technical afterthought.
[Partnership]
Security & compliance should come first in digital asset adoption.
By doing so, we’re glad to partner w/ @CertiK to combine blockchain infra, on-chain AML, smart contract auditing, and security intelligence for FIs.Read further: https://t.co/dMLgvm1DC6 pic.twitter.com/GiSpby4DSF
— Lambda256 (@Lambda256) May 28, 2026
Korea becomes the first focus for enterprise deployments
The initial rollout will focus on Korea. According to the companies, deployments will include consortium blockchain projects, on-premises implementations and infrastructure support for public-sector and regulated digital-asset use cases.
That is a fairly specific lane. It suggests the partnership is less about retail Web3 marketing and more about the quieter plumbing needed by institutions that have to answer to auditors, boards and regulators. Consortium chains, private deployments and public-sector blockchain projects usually move slowly, for good reason. They need access controls, monitoring tools, vendor accountability and clear lines of responsibility when something goes wrong.
CertiK SkyInsights provides real-time AML and risk intelligence for exchanges, Web3 teams and security operations. The platform offers wallet and transaction-level risk assessments, real-time monitoring and multi-chain intelligence, supported by more than 400 million address labels and over 2,990 recorded security incidents.
That kind of data layer has become increasingly important as institutions deal with cross-chain activity, bridge-related risks, sanctioned wallet exposure and more complex laundering patterns. Basic wallet screening is no longer enough in many cases. Compliance teams need to understand transaction history, counterparties, behavioral patterns and risk signals across multiple networks.
CertiK AI Auditor adds another layer. It is designed as a pre-audit security tool for smart contract teams, using AI-assisted scanning to identify vulnerabilities, reduce false positives and help teams organize remediation before manual audits. The tool supports Solidity, Move and Rust.
For developers, this can shorten the gap between internal testing and a full external review. It does not replace a manual audit, and serious projects should not treat it that way. But it can help teams catch common issues earlier, clean up code before review and reduce the time spent on avoidable findings. In institutional environments, that matters because launch timelines often depend on legal, security and compliance teams moving in parallel.
Security infrastructure moves closer to regulated finance
Jason Jiang, CBO at CertiK, said the partnership combines CertiK’s security intelligence and compliance capabilities with Lambda256’s infrastructure and regional market expertise. The aim, he said, is to help enterprises and financial institutions adopt digital assets with stronger operational confidence.
Lambda256 has been building its institutional stack through products such as Nodit, an enterprise-grade blockchain node platform, and Clair, a compliance and analytics engine for on-chain fraud detection, AML monitoring and risk management.
Those products fit into a broader shift in the market. Institutions do not usually want fragmented tools stitched together by internal teams unless they have to. They want infrastructure that can support node access, data analytics, monitoring, fraud detection and compliance workflows in a more controlled environment.
That is especially relevant in Korea, where large technology firms, financial groups and public-sector actors have shown sustained interest in blockchain, but under close regulatory scrutiny.
CertiK, headquartered in New York, says it has worked with more than 5,000 clients globally since 2017. The firm provides smart contract audits, penetration testing, formal verification, infrastructure assessments and compliance support across the digital asset sector.
For CertiK, the partnership gives it a stronger route into Korean and APAC enterprise channels. For Lambda256, it adds a globally known security and compliance layer to its infrastructure offering. The practical test will be whether the two companies can convert the MOU into actual deployments with banks, VASPs, public institutions and enterprise blockchain operators that need more than a standard audit report.








































