In January, there was a noteworthy on-chain event—DuskEVM mainnet is about to launch. The features of this chain are a bit different; simply being EVM-compatible is not enough. Its core selling point is the implementation of "auditable privacy" through the Hedger module. How does it do this? It uses zero-knowledge proof technology to address the pain points of financial compliance, allowing transaction data to protect privacy while still being auditable. This is a significant solution for institutional-level RWA applications. Traditional chains basically can't achieve this balance—either privacy is maximized at the expense of regulatory friendliness, or transparency is complete, sacrificing confidentiality. DuskEVM attempts to find a middle ground using cryptographic technology, targeting institutional application scenarios that need to meet compliance requirements while also protecting business privacy. Whether it can establish a foothold in the RWA track depends on actual ecosystem development and market response.
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RetailTherapist
· 3h ago
Privacy + compliance is easy to talk about, but it really requires zero-knowledge proofs. I need to see if DuskEVM can be implemented.
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zkProofInThePudding
· 01-10 01:45
The art of balancing privacy and compliance sounds great in theory, but who knows how it will be executed... However, this approach indeed breaks the previous black-and-white situation.
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TradingNightmare
· 01-09 10:59
Can privacy and compliance be achieved simultaneously? It sounds ideal, but can it really be implemented... However, Dusk's approach is indeed innovative, and RWA institutional-level applications require this kind of intermediate solution.
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GweiWatcher
· 01-09 04:53
Privacy + compliance is indeed a rare combination, but whether ZK solutions can truly be implemented remains uncertain; the ecosystem is the key.
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LoneValidator
· 01-09 04:51
The art of balancing privacy and compliance sounds good, but I'm afraid it's just empty talk. RWA still has a long way to go before truly gaining volume.
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DancingCandles
· 01-09 04:41
Auditable privacy sounds good, but can RWA really take off? It seems that institutions still trust traditional finance more.
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gas_fee_therapist
· 01-09 04:33
Privacy + compliance combo is interesting, but RWA has too many pitfalls... Can it really be implemented?
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BTCWaveRider
· 01-09 04:32
Privacy + compliance is indeed hitting the pain points of institutions, but whether zero-knowledge proofs can truly be implemented in practice remains a question.
In January, there was a noteworthy on-chain event—DuskEVM mainnet is about to launch. The features of this chain are a bit different; simply being EVM-compatible is not enough. Its core selling point is the implementation of "auditable privacy" through the Hedger module. How does it do this? It uses zero-knowledge proof technology to address the pain points of financial compliance, allowing transaction data to protect privacy while still being auditable. This is a significant solution for institutional-level RWA applications. Traditional chains basically can't achieve this balance—either privacy is maximized at the expense of regulatory friendliness, or transparency is complete, sacrificing confidentiality. DuskEVM attempts to find a middle ground using cryptographic technology, targeting institutional application scenarios that need to meet compliance requirements while also protecting business privacy. Whether it can establish a foothold in the RWA track depends on actual ecosystem development and market response.