The most uncomfortable aspect of activity on the blockchain is its transparency to the bone. How much assets do you have in your wallet, what coins have you bought, when did you make transactions—if someone knows your address, everything is laid bare. Ordinary retail investors might not feel it, but institutions and large holders holding significant funds simply cannot tolerate this. Who would want their every fund flow monitored in real-time by the entire network?



This is why the development of privacy public chains is so important. Taking projects in the privacy track as an example, they adopt zero-knowledge proof technology, which sounds a bit complex by name, but the core logic is actually very straightforward— I can prove I have enough funds to complete a transaction without revealing my wallet balance or transaction history. This kind of privacy protection is incredibly crucial for the future financial system.

Looking at the currently booming RWA (Real-World Asset) field makes this clear. Offline assets like real estate, land, and equity are gradually being tokenized and traded on-chain. Once this trend expands, the fund movements of large traders will be fully exposed. Imagine a real estate developer buying land—fund sources and transfer records are fully monitored and public. What privacy is there to speak of? Such scenarios create an urgent demand for privacy protection. The beauty of privacy public chains lies in their ability to meet both needs: on one hand, demonstrating to regulators that your funds are legal and compliant; on the other hand, preventing ordinary users from peeking into your true assets.

From a technical perspective, this project is supported by its own efficient engine, enabling transaction confirmation speeds that are much faster than some older privacy coins that confirm transactions at a snail’s pace. Achieving both speed and privacy is where the competitiveness lies. As the scale of RWA expands and institutional participation accelerates, the demand for privacy public chains will only become more urgent.
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RektButSmilingvip
· 4h ago
Zero-knowledge proofs are indeed amazing, but there are still too few practical scenarios where they can be applied.
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PermabullPetevip
· 4h ago
I've been saying it for a while—public chain transparency will eventually change. Big players are all moving to privacy chains; who wants to be exposed on the entire network?
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SleepyArbCatvip
· 4h ago
Nap time... Wait, can zero-knowledge proofs really block on-chain detectives? I think it still depends on the implementation details; don't just listen to the hype.
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SquidTeachervip
· 4h ago
The set of zero-knowledge proofs is indeed excellent, but can it really block on-chain detectives? It still feels like someone can uncover it.
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BearWhisperGodvip
· 4h ago
Isn't zero-knowledge proof just turning a blind eye? When regulators come, they'll still pull down your pants.
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