Recently, I’ve been increasingly convinced that @0xMiden is taking a path that’s quite counterintuitive.
Most on-chain systems prefer to keep everything tightly integrated, sharing state and linking steps together. When something goes wrong, the whole network shakes. Miden, on the other hand, chooses to separate things, running each independently—computing locally, generating proofs themselves. They only recognize the results, not the identities.
This design may seem cold, but it’s especially friendly to large funds. When issues occur, they don’t spread; upgrades don’t affect others. It provides clear boundaries when in use. The same approach applies to OTC trading. It’s not about traditional black-box privacy, nor is it fully transparent on-chain; instead, the process is open, but identities are hidden. You can confirm that transactions, prices, and settlements are correct, but it’s hard to trace back to individuals or strategies.
Trust doesn’t rely on intermediaries or relationships; it depends on whether the process is completed according to the rules.
Lumina Engine isn’t that mysterious; fundamentally, it’s about returning the proof generation process to the user. With the public beta imminent, it shows that this logic is finally moving from concept to usable product. Therefore, I prefer to see #Miden as an execution method designed for institutional-grade funds—no flashy slogans, but clear boundaries and low psychological burden.
If privacy is to become mainstream, it’s probably not about making anonymity more extreme, but about creating structures that people dare to use and trust with their money.
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Recently, I’ve been increasingly convinced that @0xMiden is taking a path that’s quite counterintuitive.
Most on-chain systems prefer to keep everything tightly integrated, sharing state and linking steps together. When something goes wrong, the whole network shakes. Miden, on the other hand, chooses to separate things, running each independently—computing locally, generating proofs themselves. They only recognize the results, not the identities.
This design may seem cold, but it’s especially friendly to large funds. When issues occur, they don’t spread; upgrades don’t affect others. It provides clear boundaries when in use. The same approach applies to OTC trading. It’s not about traditional black-box privacy, nor is it fully transparent on-chain; instead, the process is open, but identities are hidden. You can confirm that transactions, prices, and settlements are correct, but it’s hard to trace back to individuals or strategies.
Trust doesn’t rely on intermediaries or relationships; it depends on whether the process is completed according to the rules.
Lumina Engine isn’t that mysterious; fundamentally, it’s about returning the proof generation process to the user. With the public beta imminent, it shows that this logic is finally moving from concept to usable product. Therefore, I prefer to see #Miden as an execution method designed for institutional-grade funds—no flashy slogans, but clear boundaries and low psychological burden.
If privacy is to become mainstream, it’s probably not about making anonymity more extreme, but about creating structures that people dare to use and trust with their money.
#ZK @KaitoAI #Kaito #kaitoYap #Yap