In the field of privacy public chains, Dusk does not win attention by loud voices. It does not simply promote "complete anonymity" nor use emotional stories to attract attention. What Dusk emphasizes is a more realistic, even somewhat sobering question: when blockchain truly enters the financial system, how can privacy be accepted by regulators?



The answer from most privacy projects is straightforward—hide information as deeply as possible. But the real financial world doesn’t operate that way. Assets can be kept confidential, but transaction processes must be orderly. Dusk’s approach is different; it builds a controllable privacy mechanism using zero-knowledge proofs: ordinary transactions are invisible on-chain, but when compliance auditing is needed, it can prove legality to specific institutions without revealing information outside transaction details. This is not about stripping privacy away but transforming privacy into a form that is practically usable in engineering.

Because of this choice, Dusk has never intended to serve unregulated scenarios from the start. Its focus is on securities assets, compliant DeFi, and institutional-grade applications. The protocol-level adaptation to KYC and AML is not a later forced compromise but a core part of the system design. In other words, Dusk’s true users are not necessarily those quick-in, quick-out traders, but financial institutions that genuinely need to operate compliantly on-chain.

From a technical perspective, Dusk does not pursue complex flashy techniques but emphasizes stable implementation. Privacy computing costs, transaction confirmation efficiency, and compliance verification processes are all optimized around "financial usability." This design approach sounds more like traditional financial systems.

Looking at the DUSK token, it is essentially a network coordination tool used for staking, ensuring security, and participating in governance. Its economic model is not designed to stimulate short-term trading hype but to support the long-term stable operation of the network. This restraint may not be eye-catching in the crypto market, but it makes sense within the logic of financial infrastructure.

If the previous generation of privacy public chains addressed the question of "whether privacy is possible," Dusk contemplates "how to hide reasonably and whether it can be truly used." When compliance becomes an unavoidable question, projects that embed rules into their protocols may have truly found their own niche.
DUSK5,87%
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • 7
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
0/400
Ramen_Until_Richvip
· 9h ago
This is what being pragmatic is all about, unlike some privacy coins that boast "complete anonymity" every day, only to be proven wrong upon investigation. Dusk's zero-knowledge proof combined with controllable privacy sounds like it's genuinely aimed at real financial applications, not just hype.
View OriginalReply0
SnapshotDayLaborervip
· 9h ago
Wow, finally seeing a project that doesn't rely on hype to gain popularity. Dusk's approach is truly clear-headed, and the balance between compliance and privacy is something most people haven't thought of.
View OriginalReply0
MidnightTradervip
· 9h ago
It sounds like Dusk treats privacy as a real engineering problem rather than just a marketing story, and this approach is indeed clear-headed... But can it really be adopted by institutions?
View OriginalReply0
PumpingCroissantvip
· 9h ago
Haha, this idea is indeed clear-headed, much more realistic than those projects that boast about being "completely anonymous" every day. It's all about seeing through it. True financial privacy isn't about hiding as deep as possible; it needs to be auditable. Dusk's zero-knowledge proof controllable privacy has some real substance—privacy combined with compliance, which makes the difficulty level sky-high. But to be honest, this logic isn't very friendly to retail investors... Those who trade quickly in and out really can't use it. In the long run, institutional-grade solutions are more reliable, and tokens that aren't pumped and dumped are actually more solid. By the way, this is really the path that the next-generation privacy chain should take, right?
View OriginalReply0
BearEatsAllvip
· 9h ago
This idea is indeed clear-minded, but to be honest, it means giving up the true meaning of privacy.
View OriginalReply0
BearMarketHustlervip
· 9h ago
Hmm... this approach is indeed different and much more reliable than those scammers shouting "completely anonymous."
View OriginalReply0
MetaMaximalistvip
· 9h ago
ngl dusk's actually thinking about this the right way... most privacy chains are just larping as rebels when they should be building infrastructure that actually scales into traditional finance. the zk approach to selective auditability? that's not compromising privacy, that's *engineering* it. reminds me of why early adopters who understood protocol sustainability over hype cycles actually won
Reply0
  • Pin

Trade Crypto Anywhere Anytime
qrCode
Scan to download Gate App
Community
  • بالعربية
  • Português (Brasil)
  • 简体中文
  • English
  • Español
  • Français (Afrique)
  • Bahasa Indonesia
  • 日本語
  • Português (Portugal)
  • Русский
  • 繁體中文
  • Українська
  • Tiếng Việt