Ethereum has transformed smart contracts from an expert privilege into a tool for everyone, while Dusk aims to turn the black box of encrypted assets' "privacy" into something regulators can read.
What is the reality? Once assets enter traditional ZK projects, they fall into a black hole—users can hide well, but regulators are completely blind. This is precisely why big institutions have never dared to fully embrace DeFi; they still rely on paper ledgers for peace of mind.
Dusk's solution is quite clever: in Hedger Alpha, it uses homomorphic encryption combined with ZK technology to create a "double insurance." Users see an invisible order book, and assets are completely undisclosed. But on the other side, regulatory authorities holding an exclusive key can unlock the plaintext ledger. This "both-and" design hits the sweet spot between compliance and privacy—assets are not exposed, yet cannot evade oversight. CFOs of institutions finally dare to set aside paper copies and truly experiment with on-chain operations.
Even more interesting, Hedger is not an independent chain but exists as a privacy engine within the DuskEVM runtime. What does that mean? It means you can write smart contracts in Solidity and with slight adjustments, directly call private transfer functions to instantly "fog" account balances. Tools like Hardhat, Foundry, and Remix—familiar to Ethereum developers—can compile and deploy without any plugins. Compared to Aztec's Noir language approach, the learning curve drops from advanced math to elementary arithmetic.
With lower barriers, the ecosystem can quickly bootstrap, and the most critical concern for institutions—"optional transparency"—is also addressed. You can choose who to show the ledger to, maintaining full control.
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GamefiHarvester
· 8h ago
Wow, this design is really something. It needs to ensure privacy while also being subject to regulatory review, and it really manages to block both sides.
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RektRecorder
· 01-09 22:18
This is truly a reassurance for institutions; privacy and compliance are finally not mutually exclusive anymore.
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MemeEchoer
· 01-09 17:52
Now this is interesting. Finally, someone is thinking about how to make regulation and privacy coexist, while traditional chains simply can't pull this off.
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LiquidatedDreams
· 01-09 17:52
This logic sounds good, but will it be a different story when actually deployed? Are the regulatory keys really only given to regulators?
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HalfIsEmpty
· 01-09 17:51
Now this is really a breakthrough. Combining privacy and compliance like this is the first time I've seen it.
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GasWaster
· 01-09 17:50
The idea behind Dusk is truly brilliant; privacy and compliance are no longer mutually exclusive.
Institutions finally have a reason to go on-chain, and paper ledgers can be retired.
Solidity developers can use it directly, and the learning curve is really considerate.
But it still depends on real data—don't let it turn into another hype story.
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FalseProfitProphet
· 01-09 17:34
Now they've really forced privacy and regulation, the sworn enemies, to make peace—amazing.
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DegenGambler
· 01-09 17:32
Wait a minute, isn't this just trying to leave a backdoor for regulators? It sounds wonderful, but when it comes to user privacy vs government surveillance, I bet five bucks that privacy will be the first to be compromised.
Ethereum has transformed smart contracts from an expert privilege into a tool for everyone, while Dusk aims to turn the black box of encrypted assets' "privacy" into something regulators can read.
What is the reality? Once assets enter traditional ZK projects, they fall into a black hole—users can hide well, but regulators are completely blind. This is precisely why big institutions have never dared to fully embrace DeFi; they still rely on paper ledgers for peace of mind.
Dusk's solution is quite clever: in Hedger Alpha, it uses homomorphic encryption combined with ZK technology to create a "double insurance." Users see an invisible order book, and assets are completely undisclosed. But on the other side, regulatory authorities holding an exclusive key can unlock the plaintext ledger. This "both-and" design hits the sweet spot between compliance and privacy—assets are not exposed, yet cannot evade oversight. CFOs of institutions finally dare to set aside paper copies and truly experiment with on-chain operations.
Even more interesting, Hedger is not an independent chain but exists as a privacy engine within the DuskEVM runtime. What does that mean? It means you can write smart contracts in Solidity and with slight adjustments, directly call private transfer functions to instantly "fog" account balances. Tools like Hardhat, Foundry, and Remix—familiar to Ethereum developers—can compile and deploy without any plugins. Compared to Aztec's Noir language approach, the learning curve drops from advanced math to elementary arithmetic.
With lower barriers, the ecosystem can quickly bootstrap, and the most critical concern for institutions—"optional transparency"—is also addressed. You can choose who to show the ledger to, maintaining full control.