The RWA track is expanding rapidly, and institutional funds are continuously flowing in. But the reality is clear: how can privacy and compliance be satisfied at the same time?
Most solutions either sacrifice privacy for compliance, resulting in business secrets and user data being fully exposed; or they focus too much on privacy, inadvertently triggering regulatory issues. This dilemma makes many projects feel awkward.
Dusk Network's approach is different. From the very beginning, it has prioritized "privacy first, compliance native" as its foundation, using a combination of zero-knowledge proofs, zero-trust architecture, and global regulatory adaptation to connect privacy protection with compliance requirements. With institutional-grade asset on-chain, more and more people are choosing it.
So, what is the real innovation in its privacy protection? It’s not just adding encryption; it’s creating a "full-process, customizable" privacy system. Its self-developed Hedger privacy engine, based on zero-knowledge proofs and homomorphic encryption, can comprehensively protect sensitive data such as transaction amounts, holdings, and business information.
The key is flexibility. Hedger supports an "optional privacy" mode—this is impressive—users can flexibly adjust disclosure scope based on the scenario. In dark pool trading, order information can be completely hidden to prevent manipulation; when compliance is needed, users can selectively disclose necessary data to regulators and auditors; during personal transactions, users are in control, keeping sensitive information firmly in their hands.
This flexible privacy strategy allows Dusk to adapt to various business scenarios, protecting participants' rights while also meeting the needs of institutions and regulators.
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MetaMaskVictim
· 6h ago
Privacy and compliance are really challenging issues. It seems that Dusk's approach to optional privacy is quite practical.
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MemecoinTrader
· 6h ago
honestly the "pick your privacy level" angle is just chef's kiss for narrative positioning. watching institutions actually buy into the compliance theatre while retaining plausible deniability? that's the real alpha play here. dusk's basically selling the dream that you can have your cake and eat it too—and the market's eating it up hard rn ngl
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TestnetFreeloader
· 6h ago
Dusk's approach is truly brilliant; finally, someone has brought privacy and compliance—the two arch-enemies—together.
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AirdropHarvester
· 6h ago
The optional privacy feature is truly awesome; finally, someone has unraveled this deadlock.
The RWA track is expanding rapidly, and institutional funds are continuously flowing in. But the reality is clear: how can privacy and compliance be satisfied at the same time?
Most solutions either sacrifice privacy for compliance, resulting in business secrets and user data being fully exposed; or they focus too much on privacy, inadvertently triggering regulatory issues. This dilemma makes many projects feel awkward.
Dusk Network's approach is different. From the very beginning, it has prioritized "privacy first, compliance native" as its foundation, using a combination of zero-knowledge proofs, zero-trust architecture, and global regulatory adaptation to connect privacy protection with compliance requirements. With institutional-grade asset on-chain, more and more people are choosing it.
So, what is the real innovation in its privacy protection? It’s not just adding encryption; it’s creating a "full-process, customizable" privacy system. Its self-developed Hedger privacy engine, based on zero-knowledge proofs and homomorphic encryption, can comprehensively protect sensitive data such as transaction amounts, holdings, and business information.
The key is flexibility. Hedger supports an "optional privacy" mode—this is impressive—users can flexibly adjust disclosure scope based on the scenario. In dark pool trading, order information can be completely hidden to prevent manipulation; when compliance is needed, users can selectively disclose necessary data to regulators and auditors; during personal transactions, users are in control, keeping sensitive information firmly in their hands.
This flexible privacy strategy allows Dusk to adapt to various business scenarios, protecting participants' rights while also meeting the needs of institutions and regulators.