Privacy and transparency have always been at odds in the financial sector. One side wants to hide transaction details to protect itself, while the other insists on uncovering and inspecting them. Dusk has found a clever solution—using cryptography to encrypt and lock all transaction information, making user privacy completely confidential. But this is not about evading regulation. The key is that regulatory authorities hold specific keys, allowing them to directly audit these data within the legal framework. In other words, your private data remains well protected, but when necessary, transparency is maintained. This "auditable privacy" approach is essentially redefining the rules of the future financial game—neither sacrificing user rights nor relaxing regulatory oversight. To some extent, this paves a new way for the entire Web3 ecosystem.
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SybilAttackVictim
· 19h ago
This key is in the hands of regulators... to put it plainly, privacy is still an illusion.
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DeFiDoctor
· 19h ago
The medical record shows that this key distribution mechanism needs to be carefully reviewed... Can regulators truly rest assured with the keys in hand? From a clinical perspective, centralized power often harbors hidden risks.
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LightningClicker
· 19h ago
This key distribution logic sounds good, but the key question is who holds the keys. Could it become a new point of power rent-seeking again?
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NeverPresent
· 19h ago
I've seen this trick before. When the keys are controlled by regulators, it's like Schrödinger's privacy—basically, it's still about reading the person's face.
Privacy and transparency have always been at odds in the financial sector. One side wants to hide transaction details to protect itself, while the other insists on uncovering and inspecting them. Dusk has found a clever solution—using cryptography to encrypt and lock all transaction information, making user privacy completely confidential. But this is not about evading regulation. The key is that regulatory authorities hold specific keys, allowing them to directly audit these data within the legal framework. In other words, your private data remains well protected, but when necessary, transparency is maintained. This "auditable privacy" approach is essentially redefining the rules of the future financial game—neither sacrificing user rights nor relaxing regulatory oversight. To some extent, this paves a new way for the entire Web3 ecosystem.