Regarding the topic of privacy coins, many people tend to evaluate new projects and older projects like Monero on the same level, which actually reflects a lag in understanding technological iteration.
The design approach of traditional privacy coins is quite straightforward—hide transaction amounts, and that's it. In the early stages of Web3, this functionality was sufficient, but essentially it just moved anonymous electronic cash onto the chain, unable to support more complex business needs. Want to run applications involving multi-party protocols or complex interactions on top? That’s not possible.
Dusk’s approach is completely different—it aims to solve the problem of "programmable privacy." This is not just about encrypting transaction data, but enabling developers to write smart contracts with inherent privacy features. In other words, you can hide not only information like "transfer amounts," but also "transaction trigger conditions," "contract execution logic," and even internal details of the entire business process.
This capability is highly significant for financial institutions. Take the options market as an example: if your strike price is monitored in real-time across the network, there’s essentially no privacy. Only platforms that can run smart contracts in a privacy-preserving environment while ensuring on-chain verifiability can become the infrastructure for large-scale derivatives trading. That’s what a truly usable computing platform should look like.
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GrayscaleArbitrageur
· 18h ago
Ah, finally someone mentioned this. Indeed, many people still hold onto antique-level privacy coin thinking.
Programmable privacy is the future. Traditional privacy coins are really a bit outdated.
The options market example is spot on. Once the strike price is exposed, it's all over. This is truly what institutions need.
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LazyDevMiner
· 18h ago
Talking about Monero again, okay... Programmable privacy is indeed much more advanced than just hiding a number.
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SundayDegen
· 18h ago
This is the difference that shows true expertise. Old coins can only hide the amount, but new things hide the entire logic directly. The gameplay is simply on a different level.
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TokenomicsTherapist
· 18h ago
Uh, indeed, constantly comparing Monero to new projects gets a bit boring.
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LayerZeroHero
· 18h ago
Really, I've been seeing people confuse Monero with new projects. It's truly time to do some homework.
From the perspective of programmable privacy, it's indeed a game-changer, not just about hiding amounts.
For the derivatives market to take off, privacy infrastructure definitely needs to keep up.
By the way, can Dusk really be implemented? It feels like there's still a long way to go.
Regarding the topic of privacy coins, many people tend to evaluate new projects and older projects like Monero on the same level, which actually reflects a lag in understanding technological iteration.
The design approach of traditional privacy coins is quite straightforward—hide transaction amounts, and that's it. In the early stages of Web3, this functionality was sufficient, but essentially it just moved anonymous electronic cash onto the chain, unable to support more complex business needs. Want to run applications involving multi-party protocols or complex interactions on top? That’s not possible.
Dusk’s approach is completely different—it aims to solve the problem of "programmable privacy." This is not just about encrypting transaction data, but enabling developers to write smart contracts with inherent privacy features. In other words, you can hide not only information like "transfer amounts," but also "transaction trigger conditions," "contract execution logic," and even internal details of the entire business process.
This capability is highly significant for financial institutions. Take the options market as an example: if your strike price is monitored in real-time across the network, there’s essentially no privacy. Only platforms that can run smart contracts in a privacy-preserving environment while ensuring on-chain verifiability can become the infrastructure for large-scale derivatives trading. That’s what a truly usable computing platform should look like.