#数字资产市场洞察 Ethereum's privacy solutions are actually quite interesting — they don't simply pursue complete anonymity in a brute-force manner. Instead, they use cutting-edge technology like zero-knowledge proofs to allow you to prove the legitimacy of your funds to regulators or trading partners without revealing transaction details. This kind of "verifiable anonymity" has become a new approach in the post-Tornado Cash era. It seems to strike a balance between privacy and compliance. What do you think? $ETH $SOL $DOGE 's developers have any new developments in this area? Let's discuss this topic!
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.
8 Likes
Reward
8
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
RetroHodler91
· 12-20 01:48
Zero-knowledge proofs are truly awesome; they can protect privacy while complying with regulations. That's the right way to go.
View OriginalReply0
ZKSherlock
· 12-19 15:19
actually, the "verifiable anonymity" framing here is doing some heavy lifting that deserves scrutiny... zero-knowledge proofs are elegant mathematically, sure, but let's not pretend they're some magic compliance layer. the real question nobody's asking is: who sets the trust assumptions? because that's where privacy actually dies, not in the cryptography itself.
Reply0
FlashLoanKing
· 12-18 07:31
Zero-knowledge proofs are indeed the ultimate solution; compliance is no longer so difficult.
View OriginalReply0
GasBankrupter
· 12-18 07:31
Haha, zero-knowledge proofs are indeed amazing, but they do cost a lot of gas, brother.
Balancing privacy and compliance is really difficult; it feels like we still need to explore this path.
After Tornado was shut down, this approach is indeed clever, but will regulators buy it?
If this thing can be popularized and the Ethereum ecosystem can take off, it depends on how developers handle it.
Meeting both compliance and privacy? It's a bit challenging, but it’s definitely necessary to do so.
View OriginalReply0
TokenomicsTinfoilHat
· 12-18 07:30
Zero-knowledge proofs are truly amazing; it feels like someone has finally reconciled the pair of rivals, privacy and compliance.
#数字资产市场洞察 Ethereum's privacy solutions are actually quite interesting — they don't simply pursue complete anonymity in a brute-force manner. Instead, they use cutting-edge technology like zero-knowledge proofs to allow you to prove the legitimacy of your funds to regulators or trading partners without revealing transaction details. This kind of "verifiable anonymity" has become a new approach in the post-Tornado Cash era. It seems to strike a balance between privacy and compliance. What do you think? $ETH $SOL $DOGE 's developers have any new developments in this area? Let's discuss this topic!