Since its inception, blockchain has been defined by “openness and transparency” as one of its core features. Anyone can view on-chain transactions, fund flows, and address balances—creating unprecedented trust in the crypto market. However, as blockchain expands into mainstream finance and interfaces with institutional capital, a fundamental contradiction emerges: financial operations require transparency, but they also require privacy.
This chapter will examine, from the perspectives of regulation, asset security, institutional needs, and user privacy, why ZK (zero-knowledge proofs) are becoming the key technology to resolve the conflict between privacy and compliance in the crypto world.
In traditional finance, privacy is a given. Banks don’t publicly display your account balance, brokers don’t show all your transaction records, and funds don’t reveal real-time asset flows. These protections safeguard users, institutional strategies, business secrets, and compliance requirements.
But public blockchains operate differently. On blockchain:
This transparency builds trust, but also creates two major problems:
Any on-chain action can be tracked by analytics firms (like Chainalysis) or hackers, and addresses can even be linked to real-world identities. This poses risks for individuals, companies, and institutions.
For example:
These challenges have kept “institutional DeFi” from scaling up.
Regulators don’t require all information to be made public; rather, they care that:
While blockchain transparency enables auditability for regulators, excessive openness violates privacy laws and data protection rules (like GDPR, Hong Kong PDPO, EU MiCA, etc.). Regulators’ stance is: “You must be verifiable, but you don’t need to expose all your information.”
This is exactly where zero-knowledge proofs provide a solution.
With stablecoin legislation, MiCA, and other policies coming into force, a new trend is emerging: regulators no longer oppose privacy technology—they only reject “uncontrollable anonymity.”
In other words:
As a result, more regulatory frameworks now discuss:
From the U.S. “stablecoin transparency requirements,” to EU MiCA’s limits and exemptions on transaction privacy, to Singapore and Hong Kong’s exploration of institutional DeFi platforms—the message is clear: privacy is no longer at odds with regulation; it’s becoming an integral part of compliant infrastructure.
Despite rapid growth in DeFi, three key obstacles prevent broader adoption by institutions and mainstream users:
If institutional activity—LPing, lending, market making—is fully visible, it invites front-running (MEV), arbitrage, and fund attacks.
For example:
Cross-border settlements, supply chain finance, payroll, and business payments cannot operate in a fully transparent environment.
Privacy is thus becoming DeFi’s next growth curve—with ZK technology as its critical foundation.
Previous privacy technologies included:
Their drawbacks were:
Zero-knowledge proofs offer a new paradigm: you can prove a transaction meets the rules without revealing its details.
This enables:
In short: ZK satisfies both “privacy requirements” and “regulatory requirements”—a balance no other technology has achieved.
As Web3 technology integrates into global finance, privacy becomes an essential concern for every participant:
Within this complex ecosystem, ZK offers a viable technological path—allowing for transparent systems, compliant rules, and private data at the same time.
This is why zero-knowledge proofs are rapidly gaining mainstream adoption in the financial sector.