The cryptocurrency world has a classic contradiction that can't be resolved: DeFi wants to replace traditional finance, but traditional financial institutions simply can't get in. On the surface, it's a technical issue, but in reality, it's a compliance hurdle—public blockchains are too transparent, and banks and exchanges dislike transaction data being fully exposed; private chains are private, but liquidity suffers.
This stalemate has persisted for years until a project said: Let's try a different approach.
Dusk Network was founded in 2018 in Amsterdam, Netherlands, with the core idea of building a Layer 1 public chain based on zero-knowledge proof technology. The goal of this chain isn't to generate tokens for fundraising, but to truly serve as infrastructure for regulated finance. The EU compliance DNA has been embedded in this project from the very beginning.
Looking at Dusk's design philosophy—it's neither like Ethereum, where transaction data is fully transparent, nor like some privacy coins that are completely anonymous and non-cooperative with regulation. Instead, it introduces a new concept called "programmable privacy." Simply put: sensitive information such as transaction amounts and strategies are hidden on-chain, but through mathematical proofs, users can directly demonstrate the legality of their transactions to regulators. This "compliant privacy" approach is actually the only key for institutional funds to enter Web3.
From a technical architecture perspective, Dusk has built a comprehensive solution supported by zero-knowledge proofs as the core technology to underpin the entire system...
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ETHReserveBank
· 24m ago
Zero-knowledge proofs are indeed impressive, but can Dusk really succeed? It still feels too idealistic.
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CryptoDouble-O-Seven
· 7h ago
This idea is indeed brilliant, and the move of programmable privacy has definitely broken the deadlock.
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RetailTherapist
· 7h ago
Alright, finally someone has unraveled this deadlock. The compliant privacy approach really hits the mark.
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JustAnotherWallet
· 7h ago
Compliance and privacy are indeed new ideas, but can they really break through?
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After playing with zero-knowledge proofs for so many years, can Dusk's approach be implemented? Honestly, I'm a bit skeptical.
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Is the only key to institutional funding? That's an overstatement haha.
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EU regulations don't necessarily mean true compliance; these people are still too idealistic.
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Programmable privacy sounds good, but I'm worried it's just another concept coin.
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Finally, someone is thinking about how to bring traditional finance in, much more reasonable than those hardcore privacy coins.
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Has Dusk really thought through how to balance liquidity and privacy?
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CryptoCross-TalkClub
· 7h ago
Laughing out loud, another project claiming to "solve all problems in the crypto circle." This time, it's Dutch people working on zero-knowledge proofs? Why do I feel like I've heard this pitch somewhere before...
Wait, "programmable privacy"? Isn't that just to make both retail investors and regulators happy? That's unrealistic, brother.
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LazyDevMiner
· 7h ago
Zero-knowledge proofs are basically a bit of both—being able to do both at the same time—and truly mastering it is impressive.
View OriginalReply0
SilentAlpha
· 7h ago
Wait, can zero-knowledge proofs really convince regulators? I'm a bit skeptical. It still depends on how effective it actually is in practice.
The cryptocurrency world has a classic contradiction that can't be resolved: DeFi wants to replace traditional finance, but traditional financial institutions simply can't get in. On the surface, it's a technical issue, but in reality, it's a compliance hurdle—public blockchains are too transparent, and banks and exchanges dislike transaction data being fully exposed; private chains are private, but liquidity suffers.
This stalemate has persisted for years until a project said: Let's try a different approach.
Dusk Network was founded in 2018 in Amsterdam, Netherlands, with the core idea of building a Layer 1 public chain based on zero-knowledge proof technology. The goal of this chain isn't to generate tokens for fundraising, but to truly serve as infrastructure for regulated finance. The EU compliance DNA has been embedded in this project from the very beginning.
Looking at Dusk's design philosophy—it's neither like Ethereum, where transaction data is fully transparent, nor like some privacy coins that are completely anonymous and non-cooperative with regulation. Instead, it introduces a new concept called "programmable privacy." Simply put: sensitive information such as transaction amounts and strategies are hidden on-chain, but through mathematical proofs, users can directly demonstrate the legality of their transactions to regulators. This "compliant privacy" approach is actually the only key for institutional funds to enter Web3.
From a technical architecture perspective, Dusk has built a comprehensive solution supported by zero-knowledge proofs as the core technology to underpin the entire system...