Users face a classic dilemma: to stay in the gray area for anonymity or to compromise on compliance requirements and hand over private data. This seemingly intractable situation is about to change.



The latest collaboration between Miden and Billions Network introduces Privado's zero-knowledge proof identity stack. In simple terms, this solution allows you to verify your identity and qualifications without revealing underlying data. There’s no need to choose between privacy and compliance; both can be achieved simultaneously.

Zero-knowledge proofs are essentially mathematical magic—you can prove that something is true without revealing what it is. Applied to identity verification, this means you can prove to a platform "I meet the requirements" without handing over your personal information. This is a breakthrough for the Web3 ecosystem.

This has been a recent focus area, and Miden’s technical approach is indeed interesting. As more projects adopt similar ZK identity solutions, the entire industry may soon find a new balance point between privacy protection and compliance.
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DuskSurfervip
· 8h ago
Zero-knowledge proofs sound good in theory, but there are still too few practical use cases. Let's see if Miden can make it work.
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GasWranglervip
· 8h ago
ngl, the zk identity angle is mathematically elegant but let's be real—most implementations are still gas-inefficient af. miden's approach is interesting tho, empirically speaking the proof generation costs need actual optimization before this scales.
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PumpDoctrinevip
· 8h ago
Zero-knowledge proofs are truly amazing; finally, there's no need to choose between privacy and compliance. Miden's move is solid; ZK identity solutions are likely to become the industry standard. This is the way Web3 should look—protecting privacy while meeting regulatory requirements. After talking about it for so long, a project has finally been implemented; nice. Mathematical magic sounds reliable; a win-win for privacy and compliance, I like it.
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YieldFarmRefugeevip
· 8h ago
Really? Can zero-knowledge proofs truly be implemented? I'm still a bit skeptical. I hope Miden this time isn't just hype with no real use. Basically, it's about wanting to have both fish and bear's paw—let's see if it can really be achieved. Finally, someone is trying to solve this dilemma; it was about time. However, the ZK identity area is quite complex; we'll have to see how it's used in the future.
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CodeSmellHuntervip
· 9h ago
Finally got this. The combination of zero-knowledge proofs with identity verification should have been popularized long ago. Can privacy and compliance really be achieved at the same time? Let's first see how this方案 actually performs in practice. Privado's move indeed addresses the pain points. It's much better than choosing one over the other. This is the direction I've always wanted to see. Mathematical proofs are much more reliable than exposing information. If the ZK identity stack can really be used, the Web3 ecosystem landscape will change. By the way, how will the actual adoption rate of Miden and Billions' collaboration be? Finally, a project that considers both privacy and compliance. No more worries. Zero-knowledge proofs sound good, but it depends on how they can be used in real scenarios. If this set of tools truly becomes stable, it seems capable of solving a bunch of longstanding issues.
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