Over the past two years, privacy has been a somewhat awkward topic in the crypto space. On one hand, blockchain touts transparency and openness, while on the other, the market has never stopped demanding privacy—financial privacy, business sensitivity, security protection—these needs have never truly disappeared.
By 2025, the tide has turned. Institutions are beginning to participate seriously, regulatory frameworks are gradually becoming clear, and cryptographic tools like zero-knowledge proofs are becoming increasingly mature. That old adversarial anonymity approach is evolving into truly composable, compliant, and more systematized infrastructure. Privacy is no longer niche resistance, but an unavoidable foundational requirement in crypto finance.
From a market perspective, the data is most telling. Since the second half of 2025, privacy assets overall have outperformed the broader market. Led by Zcash and Monero, traditional privacy coins have shown obvious gains, with Zcash's annual gains reaching close to 1100%, at one point even surpassing Monero's market cap. This is not mere speculative hype, but the market repricing the long-term value of privacy infrastructure—especially solutions that combine privacy characteristics with compliance flexibility.
The technological iteration is even more profound. Early privacy projects mainly focused on obscuring transaction paths and anonymizing transfers; Monero, early Zcash, Tornado Cash and others all followed this approach. This was the Privacy 1.0 phase, with the core being to separate on-chain identities. The new projects now have completely different thinking—
Over the past two years, privacy has been a somewhat awkward topic in the crypto space. On one hand, blockchain touts transparency and openness, while on the other, the market has never stopped demanding privacy—financial privacy, business sensitivity, security protection—these needs have never truly disappeared.
By 2025, the tide has turned. Institutions are beginning to participate seriously, regulatory frameworks are gradually becoming clear, and cryptographic tools like zero-knowledge proofs are becoming increasingly mature. That old adversarial anonymity approach is evolving into truly composable, compliant, and more systematized infrastructure. Privacy is no longer niche resistance, but an unavoidable foundational requirement in crypto finance.
From a market perspective, the data is most telling. Since the second half of 2025, privacy assets overall have outperformed the broader market. Led by Zcash and Monero, traditional privacy coins have shown obvious gains, with Zcash's annual gains reaching close to 1100%, at one point even surpassing Monero's market cap. This is not mere speculative hype, but the market repricing the long-term value of privacy infrastructure—especially solutions that combine privacy characteristics with compliance flexibility.
The technological iteration is even more profound. Early privacy projects mainly focused on obscuring transaction paths and anonymizing transfers; Monero, early Zcash, Tornado Cash and others all followed this approach. This was the Privacy 1.0 phase, with the core being to separate on-chain identities. The new projects now have completely different thinking—