Many blockchain projects follow a pattern of first growing wildly and then responding to regulations. They rapidly acquire users, but become very passive when regulatory pressure arrives.



Dusk takes a completely different approach — considering regulation from the very beginning. There is a clear logic behind this: the financial system inherently requires certainty, and avoiding regulation will only become a long-term weakness.

**The real issue lies in data permissions**

Who has the right to view on-chain data? Who can verify transactions? How can audits meet regulatory requirements without exposing all information? Most blockchains haven't thought this through. Some are overly transparent, sacrificing privacy; others are too guarded, which damages trust.

Dusk's answer is balance — embedding compliance into the core architecture rather than patching it afterward.

**Privacy and regulation are not actually opposed**

This is a common misconception. Privacy isn't about hiding things; it's about controlling who can access what information. The operational logic of traditional finance is like this: transactions are private by default, and regulatory agencies only gain access when necessary.

Dusk reproduces this model on-chain — transactions remain confidential, sensitive data is protected, but auditors can verify information conditionally when needed. This approach both protects user privacy and establishes accountability.

**The key weapon is selective disclosure**

Dusk allows data to be disclosed on demand. Auditors can verify transactions without viewing the entire history; institutions can meet compliance requirements without revealing internal information; users can maintain privacy while remaining legitimate. This flexibility is a necessary condition for blockchains supporting genuine financial activities.
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HashRateHermitvip
· 18h ago
To be honest, I buy into Dusk's logic... It's much more reliable than those projects that first raise funds and then run away.
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LeekCuttervip
· 18h ago
This logic sounds good, but how many projects can actually achieve it? Most are just slogans.
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MevTearsvip
· 18h ago
It should have been done this way a long time ago. Most projects indeed focus on raising funds first and then thinking about regulation.
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GateUser-ccc36bc5vip
· 18h ago
Selective disclosure is indeed a smart approach, much better than projects that are either fully transparent or completely black box.
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ForeverBuyingDipsvip
· 18h ago
This is the right way, finally a project has figured it out.
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WagmiOrRektvip
· 18h ago
The idea of selective disclosure is indeed good; it's much better than projects that are either fully transparent or hide everything completely.
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TokenSherpavip
· 18h ago
actually, this is where most projects get it backwards — they treat compliance like a post-launch feature update rather than... y'know, foundational architecture. dusk's approach fundamentally reframes the whole game, historically speaking.
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