Under the night sky of the financial center, I have been pondering a question: How can blockchain both safeguard privacy and meet regulatory requirements?
It was only through in-depth research that I discovered some projects are providing answers. For example, by using cryptographic techniques like zero-knowledge proofs, enterprises can process sensitive data on-chain—such as supply chain financial documents and securitized asset lists—while ensuring the information is verifiable but invisible to outsiders. This solves the most awkward contradiction of the Web3 era: how to hide business secrets on transparent ledgers while still complying with privacy protections and regulatory audits.
Interestingly, some protocols have designed a "sunset mechanism": authorized regulatory agencies hold specific keys that can decrypt certain data when necessary for audits—similar to a lighthouse guiding ships in the dusk. This design makes related tokens not just simple gas consumables, but true mediums for data rights transfer within the ecosystem.
From another perspective, traditional finance has always been wary of public blockchains, mainly due to the dilemma between data privacy and regulatory compliance. If such solutions can be practically implemented, financial institutions entering the encrypted harbor will no longer be just a slogan—large-scale transactions in Lujiazui and supply chain financing settlements could quietly be completed on-chain through privacy-preserving computation technologies.
This direction is worth continuous observation.
View Original
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
GoldDiggerDuck
· 12h ago
Zero-knowledge proofs indeed have imagination, but whether they can truly bring traditional finance in depends on implementation... The folks in Lujiazui are not that easy to fool.
The design of the regulatory key is quite interesting, essentially giving the government a backdoor. Where is the balance between privacy and compliance?
Currently, many projects boast loudly, but few truly solve supply chain finance. Keep observing.
The Gas cost of zero-knowledge proofs is still a major drawback; it can't compare to centralized databases.
The sunset mechanism sounds like leaving a way out for regulators, so that tokens have actual demand. Not a bad idea.
If this can really be implemented, traditional finance entering the scene would indeed be a new story, but the prerequisite is solid technology and regulatory approval.
View OriginalReply0
ContractTearjerker
· 12h ago
Zero-knowledge proofs sound amazing, but how many projects can truly be implemented? To put it simply, it still depends on who can truly handle the pair of rivals: privacy and regulation.
View OriginalReply0
MissedTheBoat
· 12h ago
ZK proofs sound promising, but how quickly can they be practically implemented? It still feels like just theoretical discussion.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-beba108d
· 12h ago
Zero-knowledge proofs sound great, but there's still a long way to go before they are truly implemented in the financial sector.
View OriginalReply0
PonziDetector
· 12h ago
ZKP technology sounds good in theory, but the number of projects that can truly get it running is few and far between.
Under the night sky of the financial center, I have been pondering a question: How can blockchain both safeguard privacy and meet regulatory requirements?
It was only through in-depth research that I discovered some projects are providing answers. For example, by using cryptographic techniques like zero-knowledge proofs, enterprises can process sensitive data on-chain—such as supply chain financial documents and securitized asset lists—while ensuring the information is verifiable but invisible to outsiders. This solves the most awkward contradiction of the Web3 era: how to hide business secrets on transparent ledgers while still complying with privacy protections and regulatory audits.
Interestingly, some protocols have designed a "sunset mechanism": authorized regulatory agencies hold specific keys that can decrypt certain data when necessary for audits—similar to a lighthouse guiding ships in the dusk. This design makes related tokens not just simple gas consumables, but true mediums for data rights transfer within the ecosystem.
From another perspective, traditional finance has always been wary of public blockchains, mainly due to the dilemma between data privacy and regulatory compliance. If such solutions can be practically implemented, financial institutions entering the encrypted harbor will no longer be just a slogan—large-scale transactions in Lujiazui and supply chain financing settlements could quietly be completed on-chain through privacy-preserving computation technologies.
This direction is worth continuous observation.