The privacy track has reached an interesting crossroads in recent years.



Most privacy chains follow a straightforward approach—maximizing anonymity. The identities of transaction parties are hidden, and the flow of funds cannot be traced. This logic works well in a purely encrypted ecosystem, but once regulated financial assets are involved, its shortcomings become apparent.

DUSK, on the other hand, has chosen a different path. It does not equate privacy with "completely invisible," but redefines it as a capability that can be managed within a regulatory framework. In other words—privacy and auditing are not mortal enemies, but can coexist.

This is how the real financial world operates. Most information should be protected, but once compliance conditions are triggered, its authenticity and legality must be demonstrable. Therefore, DUSK builds an auditable privacy model. The key to this model is not deleting information, but establishing clear data visibility boundaries and verification rules. The system defaults to protecting sensitive data and can perform authorized verification when necessary. Privacy and compliance are finally no longer at odds.

Looking at traditional privacy chains, they were not designed with auditing and regulation in mind, lacking verifiable interfaces in their systems. So when it comes to regulated assets like securities and funds, they become limited and can only be confined within encrypted native applications.

DUSK is different. Its privacy design is specifically built for financial use cases. From a system perspective, auditable privacy does not weaken security—in fact, it enhances system controllability through regulation. Privacy is no longer maintained by an "absolute black box," but through clear permission divisions and compliance processes.

So the difference is not in technical details, but in the fundamental orientation of design goals. This determines DUSK’s long-term position within compliant financial infrastructure.
DUSK74,32%
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PumpDoctrinevip
· 7h ago
This is the true Web3 financial imagination—privacy doesn't necessarily mean lawlessness. But here's the problem: how many institutions will actually use the DUSK model... Everyone wants privacy but fears being investigated. How do we resolve this contradiction? Got it, DUSK is building compliant privacy infrastructure, much more clear-headed than traditional privacy chain ideas. Haha, other privacy coins are still obsessed with saving face, but this is about mastering the game of real-world finance. Honestly, this auditable privacy sounds good, but how many projects will actually adopt it? That's still a question. It seems DUSK has found a clever balance—neither compromising privacy nor being shut down by regulators. This logic is essentially about making privacy controllable. It sounds simple but is hard to implement. So in the future, those that truly survive might have to go in this direction—pure privacy chains are already a thing of the past. DUSK's approach is correct, but can the ecosystem applications keep up? That's the key. This is the difference between product design thinking and tech geek thinking. Understanding the market reveals the value of this privacy-compliance framework.
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RektButStillHerevip
· 7h ago
Wait, about the audit privacy... Can it really be a win-win? Feels like I'm fooling myself.
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All-InQueenvip
· 7h ago
This idea is indeed brilliant. Privacy doesn't mean hiding everything; it's about transparency within certain rules. DUSK's move is quite interesting.
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AirdropHunterZhangvip
· 7h ago
It's the same concept of "compliance and privacy" again, sounding like trying to find a balance between the fish and the bear paw. Frankly, it still comes down to being subject to censorship.
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quiet_lurkervip
· 7h ago
Wow, someone finally explained this clearly. The idea that privacy and auditing can coexist is indeed brilliant. Traditional privacy chains with the "completely black box" approach really can't handle real money games. The DUSK concept has potential, but it seems most people still prefer absolute black boxes. Changing this mindset isn't that easy. For this to truly be implemented, it will be the watershed in the race.
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MEVVictimAlliancevip
· 7h ago
Ah, finally someone said it. Privacy and compliance are not mutually exclusive issues at all. The DUSK approach is really clever, directly hitting the dead end of other privacy chains. Traditional privacy chains stick to one path, what's the point of audits? They never consider how institutional money will use them. This is the reality—financial markets have to operate this way.
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AlwaysQuestioningvip
· 8h ago
Wow, is this the way out for privacy chains? I thought it was a choice between the two—can privacy and compliance really be achieved simultaneously?
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