There is no shortage of technical show-offs in the DeFi market; what is truly lacking are solutions that address actual needs. Recently, I came across a project whose core logic is to solve two major challenges—compliance and privacy—within a decentralized framework.
How does this project achieve that? It adopts a modular design, separating settlement, execution, privacy protection, and compliance management into independent modules. The benefits are obvious—transactions are not slowed down by compliance checks, institutional users don’t have to worry about falling into regulatory traps, and it also avoids the chain reorganization risks common in traditional public blockchains.
What’s more interesting is their layout in RWA (Real-World Asset Tokenization). Imagine traditional financial assets like stocks and bonds being able to circulate directly on the chain—this opens up a trillion-dollar market space. Ordinary investors can participate, liquidity is unleashed, and cross-border asset transactions become possible. This is not just hype; it’s genuinely building a bridge between traditional finance and Web3.
The significance of such projects lies here—they are not about revolution for the sake of revolution, but about finding practical, implementable solutions.
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.
There is no shortage of technical show-offs in the DeFi market; what is truly lacking are solutions that address actual needs. Recently, I came across a project whose core logic is to solve two major challenges—compliance and privacy—within a decentralized framework.
How does this project achieve that? It adopts a modular design, separating settlement, execution, privacy protection, and compliance management into independent modules. The benefits are obvious—transactions are not slowed down by compliance checks, institutional users don’t have to worry about falling into regulatory traps, and it also avoids the chain reorganization risks common in traditional public blockchains.
What’s more interesting is their layout in RWA (Real-World Asset Tokenization). Imagine traditional financial assets like stocks and bonds being able to circulate directly on the chain—this opens up a trillion-dollar market space. Ordinary investors can participate, liquidity is unleashed, and cross-border asset transactions become possible. This is not just hype; it’s genuinely building a bridge between traditional finance and Web3.
The significance of such projects lies here—they are not about revolution for the sake of revolution, but about finding practical, implementable solutions.