Privacy and regulation are often described in the blockchain space as a fish and a bear paw—seemingly mutually exclusive. But in reality, financial institutions and those who want to bring high-end assets on-chain need both. Dusk Network has come up with a solution—not by making concessions or compromises, but through the sophisticated technical design of layered privacy ledgers, finding a balance on the tightrope.
The core idea is actually not complicated. The layered privacy ledger divides transaction data into two independently operating layers, like a dual-track system:
One side is the public audit layer, fully transparent to authorized regulators (such as financial regulatory agencies and auditors). This layer can meet legal compliance requirements like AML (Anti-Money Laundering) and CFT (Countering the Financing of Terrorism), ensuring on-chain activities are controllable within the regulatory framework.
The other side is the private transaction layer, invisible to ordinary users and other participants in the network. Sensitive information such as transaction amounts, asset balances, and counterparties are fully encrypted using cryptographic methods like zero-knowledge proofs.
To illustrate clearly—imagine a specially designed safe: regulators have the authority to confirm that "the assets inside the vault are legitimate," but cannot see exactly how many shares of a certain company each user has in their safe; users also do not know who holds what. This is the beauty of "selective disclosure"—not everything is exposed, but not everything is hidden.
Dusk's innovation is not limited to the technical level; the team is also continuously advancing in practical application scenarios.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
12 Likes
Reward
12
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
MoonlightGamer
· 10h ago
This dual-track system is indeed clever; regulatory authorities are satisfied, and users are comfortable. However, will its actual implementation be another story?
View OriginalReply0
fren.eth
· 10h ago
The dual-track system is a decent idea, but the key is whether it can be truly implemented. Let's wait and see.
View OriginalReply0
MEVHunter
· 10h ago
The idea of layered private ledgers is good, but the key is still execution. Can the gas costs of zero-knowledge proofs be controlled? That's where the real arbitrage opportunity lies.
View OriginalReply0
WhaleMinion
· 10h ago
Yeah, this dual-track system is really clever—it keeps the regulatory authorities satisfied while also protecting our privacy. We really can have it both ways.
Privacy and regulation are often described in the blockchain space as a fish and a bear paw—seemingly mutually exclusive. But in reality, financial institutions and those who want to bring high-end assets on-chain need both. Dusk Network has come up with a solution—not by making concessions or compromises, but through the sophisticated technical design of layered privacy ledgers, finding a balance on the tightrope.
The core idea is actually not complicated. The layered privacy ledger divides transaction data into two independently operating layers, like a dual-track system:
One side is the public audit layer, fully transparent to authorized regulators (such as financial regulatory agencies and auditors). This layer can meet legal compliance requirements like AML (Anti-Money Laundering) and CFT (Countering the Financing of Terrorism), ensuring on-chain activities are controllable within the regulatory framework.
The other side is the private transaction layer, invisible to ordinary users and other participants in the network. Sensitive information such as transaction amounts, asset balances, and counterparties are fully encrypted using cryptographic methods like zero-knowledge proofs.
To illustrate clearly—imagine a specially designed safe: regulators have the authority to confirm that "the assets inside the vault are legitimate," but cannot see exactly how many shares of a certain company each user has in their safe; users also do not know who holds what. This is the beauty of "selective disclosure"—not everything is exposed, but not everything is hidden.
Dusk's innovation is not limited to the technical level; the team is also continuously advancing in practical application scenarios.