Recently launched projects are emerging one after another, but only a few truly attract the favor of large institutions. SOL is known for its speed, and AVAX's performance is indeed strong, but privacy and compliance have always been hurdles that are hard to overcome.
Taking a closer look at Dusk's solution is quite interesting—using zero-knowledge proofs to achieve selective disclosure. This isn't about hiding from regulators; rather, it's a clever design: allowing regulatory agencies to see key data while others cannot. This logic alone can explain many things. For institutional users, it meets compliance requirements while protecting privacy. This balance might be the key to the next wave of public chain competition.
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AirdropHustler
· 55m ago
Indeed, the idea of dusk is truly brilliant. I never thought of using zero-knowledge proofs like this.
What institutions want is exactly this—both passing audits and protecting privacy. It's much smarter than projects that are either fully transparent or fully private.
No matter how fast SOL and AVAX are, it's useless if you can't get past the regulatory hurdle. That's the real next-generation competitiveness.
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ContractTester
· 10h ago
It's really not bragging; Dusk's approach to selective disclosure is indeed quite innovative... Much smarter than those projects that fight a guerrilla war with regulators.
Institutional funds are the most realistic; they require privacy and compliance at the same time. Whoever can strike the right balance wins.
SOL is fast, but compliance has always been a pain point.
This logic is truly brilliant—regulators can see the key data without compromising privacy... I have to say, it's a clever trick.
Dusk has been a bit dormant lately, but from a technical perspective, this solution is quite advanced.
In the next round of institutional entry, the key will be the depth of thinking in these details.
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NFTregretter
· 10h ago
Wow, the idea of Dusk is really brilliant. Finally, someone has reconciled the pair of adversaries, compliance and privacy.
Institutions are most afraid not of regulation, but of unclear regulation. Dusk directly provides a solution.
Everyone talks about SOL and AVAX's speed and performance every day, but when it comes to institutions, it still depends on who can solve the deadlock of privacy + compliance. Dusk might really be the next big opportunity.
But honestly, can ordinary users understand zero-knowledge proofs? It still depends on institutions to foot the bill to keep it alive.
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StableCoinKaren
· 10h ago
Dusk's approach to zero-knowledge proofs is truly brilliant, instantly resolving the conflict between compliance and privacy.
NGO organizations benefit the most from this system, as it can pass audits and hide private funds, elevating it beyond SOL's purely speed-based approach.
True competitiveness isn't about speed, but about whether you can navigate policy boundaries.
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RumbleValidator
· 10h ago
Zero-knowledge proofs indeed hit the key points; balancing compliance and privacy is not so easily resolved.
Recently launched projects are emerging one after another, but only a few truly attract the favor of large institutions. SOL is known for its speed, and AVAX's performance is indeed strong, but privacy and compliance have always been hurdles that are hard to overcome.
Taking a closer look at Dusk's solution is quite interesting—using zero-knowledge proofs to achieve selective disclosure. This isn't about hiding from regulators; rather, it's a clever design: allowing regulatory agencies to see key data while others cannot. This logic alone can explain many things. For institutional users, it meets compliance requirements while protecting privacy. This balance might be the key to the next wave of public chain competition.