The Eternal Dilemma of Blockchain: Can Transaction Transparency and Privacy Protection Truly Coexist?



Most financial institutions value privacy, but public blockchains are often as transparent as glass. Dusk Network was created to solve this contradiction—a privacy-first blockchain designed specifically for DeFi and the tokenization of real-world assets (RWA).

**Three Major Technological Breakthroughs**

First is the privacy aspect. Dusk employs zero-knowledge proof technology, particularly its self-developed Phoenix model, which can completely hide transaction amounts and the identities of the parties involved, achieving truly anonymous transactions. This is not a hacking tool, but a legitimate application of cryptography.

Second is compliance—which is a key differentiator between Dusk and other privacy coins. The project has a built-in "selective disclosure" mechanism that allows users to protect their privacy while cooperating with regulatory audits. In other words, if regulators need to verify transactions, they can do so without exposing other details. This design makes institutional investors more willing to participate.

Additionally, with an efficient consensus mechanism, Dusk aims to address both scalability and decentralization challenges simultaneously. Combining privacy protection and regulatory friendliness, this approach indeed has unique advantages in the DeFi infrastructure space.

Compared to existing solutions, Dusk’s philosophy is: privacy does not have to oppose compliance; instead, the two can mutually enhance each other.
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RugPullAlertBotvip
· 8h ago
The idea of selective disclosure sounds nice, but when regulatory authorities come to investigate, who can guarantee they won't uncover any clues?
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NoStopLossNutvip
· 01-09 16:57
Selective disclosure is a brilliant move; finally, someone has reconciled the pair of rivals, privacy and compliance.
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ValidatorVikingvip
· 01-08 16:51
zero-knowledge proofs sound solid on paper, but let's see if this selective disclosure actually holds up under real validator scrutiny or if it's just regulatory theater.
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InscriptionGrillervip
· 01-08 16:47
Selective disclosure? Basically, it's about wanting to have your cake and eat it too. Is that okay, bro?
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SellLowExpertvip
· 01-08 16:46
Selective disclosure sounds good, but can we really trust it? It seems more likely that regulators will have a backdoor.
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ShibaMillionairen'tvip
· 01-08 16:46
Selective disclosure sounds good, but can we really trust regulatory audits?
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ForkItAllDayvip
· 01-08 16:42
Selective disclosure is really a brilliant move; it can reassure institutional investors while avoiding complete exposure. I admire Dusk's approach.
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