Here's the thing about privacy and transparency in crypto: Monero actually delivers what Bitcoin promises but doesn't fully execute. Bitcoin calls itself decentralized, yet every transaction lives on a public ledger forever—address linking, amount tracking, movement history, all visible. Monero? It takes privacy seriously. Ring signatures, stealth addresses, RingCT—these aren't marketing buzzwords, they're actual cryptographic mechanisms that hide sender, receiver, and transaction amounts by default. Not optional. Not a layer-2 workaround.
Bitcoin pioneered the whole space, no doubt. But it's pseudonymous, not anonymous. There's a fundamental difference. One lets you trace money flows; the other doesn't. For those who actually care about financial privacy as a core feature—not as an afterthought—Monero does what Bitcoin genuinely isn't built to do. It's not about comparing adoption rates or market cap. It's about what each protocol was actually designed to achieve.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
Here's the thing about privacy and transparency in crypto: Monero actually delivers what Bitcoin promises but doesn't fully execute. Bitcoin calls itself decentralized, yet every transaction lives on a public ledger forever—address linking, amount tracking, movement history, all visible. Monero? It takes privacy seriously. Ring signatures, stealth addresses, RingCT—these aren't marketing buzzwords, they're actual cryptographic mechanisms that hide sender, receiver, and transaction amounts by default. Not optional. Not a layer-2 workaround.
Bitcoin pioneered the whole space, no doubt. But it's pseudonymous, not anonymous. There's a fundamental difference. One lets you trace money flows; the other doesn't. For those who actually care about financial privacy as a core feature—not as an afterthought—Monero does what Bitcoin genuinely isn't built to do. It's not about comparing adoption rates or market cap. It's about what each protocol was actually designed to achieve.