After in-depth research into the Dusk project recently, I realized that privacy and compliance are not mutually exclusive—it's all about what technology is used to integrate them.
Dusk's Segregated Byzantine Agreement consensus mechanism impressed me. Unlike traditional PoS that simply relies on staking and block production in turn, it incorporates a dual-layer protection with random ordering and reputation filtering. This approach preserves the essence of decentralization while significantly reducing the survival space for malicious nodes. In practical operation, it can achieve transaction confirmation within seconds while maintaining a complete audit trail. Compared to privacy public chains that often have skyrocketing TPS but numerous blind spots in auditing, this solution is indeed more robust.
The zero-trust custody also addresses two major pain points of RWA: the risk of custodians running away and sensitive data leaks. It relies on cryptography to ensure custody security, achieving "authorized parties can see, unrelated parties cannot touch." Because this system is operational, the project has secured a 300 million euro securities tokenization order. Traditional institutions are not here to hear stories; they want technical solutions that can survive under strict regulation.
The DUSK token itself has no tricks. Asset issuance requires it, governance voting requires it, node staking also requires it—real demand scenarios support the token's value. What's even more commendable is that compliance is not just lip service. The partnership with NPEX has obtained official licenses like MTF, demonstrating the willingness to undergo regulatory scrutiny and take responsibility for institutional funds.
The rarity of projects like this lies in their approach: not relying on hype, focusing on technology development, and diligently addressing real-world scenarios. In the RWA track, few projects have come this far.
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After in-depth research into the Dusk project recently, I realized that privacy and compliance are not mutually exclusive—it's all about what technology is used to integrate them.
Dusk's Segregated Byzantine Agreement consensus mechanism impressed me. Unlike traditional PoS that simply relies on staking and block production in turn, it incorporates a dual-layer protection with random ordering and reputation filtering. This approach preserves the essence of decentralization while significantly reducing the survival space for malicious nodes. In practical operation, it can achieve transaction confirmation within seconds while maintaining a complete audit trail. Compared to privacy public chains that often have skyrocketing TPS but numerous blind spots in auditing, this solution is indeed more robust.
The zero-trust custody also addresses two major pain points of RWA: the risk of custodians running away and sensitive data leaks. It relies on cryptography to ensure custody security, achieving "authorized parties can see, unrelated parties cannot touch." Because this system is operational, the project has secured a 300 million euro securities tokenization order. Traditional institutions are not here to hear stories; they want technical solutions that can survive under strict regulation.
The DUSK token itself has no tricks. Asset issuance requires it, governance voting requires it, node staking also requires it—real demand scenarios support the token's value. What's even more commendable is that compliance is not just lip service. The partnership with NPEX has obtained official licenses like MTF, demonstrating the willingness to undergo regulatory scrutiny and take responsibility for institutional funds.
The rarity of projects like this lies in their approach: not relying on hype, focusing on technology development, and diligently addressing real-world scenarios. In the RWA track, few projects have come this far.