As the New Year 2026 begins, the blockchain community quietly welcomes an interesting piece of news — Dusk's EVM-compatible mainnet officially launched in the second week of January.
This project is a bit different. Since its establishment in 2018, Dusk has been forging its own path — not following the high TPS race, not copying Ethereum's old routines, but instead making privacy protection and regulatory auditability its core DNA. In simple terms, it aims to find a balance between two seemingly contradictory needs: protecting business data privacy on one hand, and meeting KYC/AML compliance requirements on the other.
So, what does Dusk do? It uses two cutting-edge technologies — zero-knowledge proofs and homomorphic encryption — to achieve on-chain transaction privacy while still leaving an audit trail for regulators. This is almost unique in scenarios where traditional finance goes on-chain.
Now that the EVM compatibility layer is live, it’s a significant milestone. For developers, the barrier has been lowered — they can continue writing contracts in Solidity, using familiar toolchains, and deploy directly to the Dusk mainnet. All transactions automatically inherit the underlying privacy features, no need to reinvent the wheel. Plus, with the Hedger protocol, compliant private transactions can run within the EVM environment, protecting user data privacy while providing complete proofs during audits.
In other words, institutional-grade applications that previously could only run on permissioned chains now have a new option. From the technical framework to practical implementation, Dusk has taken the right step.
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MemeCoinSavant
· 6h ago
ngl the privacy-compliance balance thesis here is actually pretty based... according to my behavioral analysis of institutional adoption patterns, this hedger protocol thing might genuinely move the needle
Reply0
NFTRegretful
· 6h ago
Keeping a low profile in doing things is awesome; no need to shout every day about how fast you are.
I think Dusk's approach is correct; privacy and compliance are really not mutually exclusive issues.
Zero-knowledge proofs combined with homomorphic encryption—this combo is indeed interesting. Institutional-level applications finally have a way forward.
Once EVM compatibility is in place, developers will have a much better experience, directly reducing development costs.
But honestly, it still depends on whether the ecosystem can truly keep up; no matter how good the technology is, if no one uses it, it's pointless.
This is the kind of blockchain I want to see—not the kind that gets caught up in speed competitions every day.
Balancing privacy and auditability is easier to say than to do; it requires real business scenarios to validate its effectiveness.
It seems that institutional finance might be the next growth point; it's much more interesting compared to pure DEXs.
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PortfolioAlert
· 6h ago
Zero-knowledge proofs combined with homomorphic encryption—this is truly a masterstroke. Privacy and compliance are well balanced, unlike some projects that just shout slogans.
EVM compatibility scores a point; developers definitely save effort, and the ecosystem is building up quickly. But the real question is whether it can be successfully implemented and run smoothly.
Dusk's approach seems aimed at targeting institutional-grade applications. Privacy plus auditability—traditional finance might really need something like this.
Eight years without following the trend, still maintaining its own style. It all depends on whether the ecosystem can truly explode. It's still early days, and the risks are not small.
How mature is the technology of zero-knowledge proofs? Will user experience be compromised?
It feels like just another mainnet launch news. Actual users and applications are the only true tests. Waiting for the data.
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SoliditySlayer
· 6h ago
Zero-knowledge proofs combined with an audit channel, this idea does have some potential. But whether actual users will buy in remains to be seen.
This is very different from those projects that only hype privacy; surprisingly, it can even satisfy regulators.
Dusk's move is indeed clever, with EVM compatibility significantly lowering the barrier to entry, and reducing developers' migration costs directly.
Wait, is Hedger protocol reliable? It seems I haven't heard many real-world cases about it.
Privacy transactions are indeed in demand, but will permissioned chain users actively switch over? That’s a bit uncertain.
It sounds good in theory, but implementation is the key. Let’s look at the data.
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InscriptionGriller
· 6h ago
Hey, Dusk's recent move is quite interesting. Isn't it just another high-TPS fantasy show to fleece the newbies?
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MelonField
· 6h ago
This is the real deal—privacy and compliance go hand in hand, not just talk.
View OriginalReply0
MeltdownSurvivalist
· 6h ago
Zero-knowledge proofs combined with homomorphic encryption—no one has really tried this combo before. Privacy and compliance, the classic pair, have been harmonized by them.
As the New Year 2026 begins, the blockchain community quietly welcomes an interesting piece of news — Dusk's EVM-compatible mainnet officially launched in the second week of January.
This project is a bit different. Since its establishment in 2018, Dusk has been forging its own path — not following the high TPS race, not copying Ethereum's old routines, but instead making privacy protection and regulatory auditability its core DNA. In simple terms, it aims to find a balance between two seemingly contradictory needs: protecting business data privacy on one hand, and meeting KYC/AML compliance requirements on the other.
So, what does Dusk do? It uses two cutting-edge technologies — zero-knowledge proofs and homomorphic encryption — to achieve on-chain transaction privacy while still leaving an audit trail for regulators. This is almost unique in scenarios where traditional finance goes on-chain.
Now that the EVM compatibility layer is live, it’s a significant milestone. For developers, the barrier has been lowered — they can continue writing contracts in Solidity, using familiar toolchains, and deploy directly to the Dusk mainnet. All transactions automatically inherit the underlying privacy features, no need to reinvent the wheel. Plus, with the Hedger protocol, compliant private transactions can run within the EVM environment, protecting user data privacy while providing complete proofs during audits.
In other words, institutional-grade applications that previously could only run on permissioned chains now have a new option. From the technical framework to practical implementation, Dusk has taken the right step.