The integration of compliance layers in Web3 projects is making real progress. What we're seeing with solutions like the IDOS framework is a meaningful step forward for user protection. When security infrastructure gets baked into the protocol level rather than bolted on later, everyone benefits. This kind of architectural approach to safety could set a new standard.
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GweiTooHigh
· 11h ago
Compliance built into the protocol layer? Sounds good, but I'm worried it might just be empty promises again.
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CommunityJanitor
· 18h ago
Built-in security at the protocol layer? Sounds great, but how many can actually be implemented? As for frameworks like IDOS, we'll have to wait and see how things develop.
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PrivacyMaximalist
· 18h ago
Protocol-level compliance is indeed the general trend, but to be honest, whether the IDOS system can truly be implemented remains to be seen.
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PretendingToReadDocs
· 18h ago
Doing compliance at the protocol layer is truly the right approach, unlike those later patchwork solutions that only treat the symptoms, not the root cause.
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MEVictim
· 18h ago
This protocol-level security setup is indeed something; it's much more reliable than post-release patches.
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SilentAlpha
· 18h ago
Security design at the protocol layer is indeed the right approach, but can it really be reliable in practice?
The integration of compliance layers in Web3 projects is making real progress. What we're seeing with solutions like the IDOS framework is a meaningful step forward for user protection. When security infrastructure gets baked into the protocol level rather than bolted on later, everyone benefits. This kind of architectural approach to safety could set a new standard.