Financial blockchain issues are often discussed: either open up completely and lose trade secrets, or hide tightly and face regulatory concerns. Is there a way to achieve both?
Technically, there is a solution. By combining zero-knowledge proofs with differential privacy, users can prove that a transaction is valid without revealing specific details. For example, in a loan approval scenario, one can prove that the applicant's credit score meets the threshold without exposing the actual score. Meanwhile, regulators hold the keys for backend audits—they can check at any time. This design is essentially the same as the EU GDPR's "data minimization" principle.
From a technical perspective, the verification speed of zero-knowledge proofs is in the millisecond range, much faster than Monero's ring signatures. Data shows that global financial data breaches cause an annual loss of $200 billion. Using this privacy solution can reduce the risk by over 90%.
There are many real-world cases. Last year, a leading DEX launched a privacy trading pool where users' transaction records are encrypted and stored securely, yet liquidity providers can still earn compliant returns. An institutional investor directly traded security tokens on the platform, with an average daily transaction volume exceeding $30 million, without triggering any regulatory alerts. This demonstrates that privacy and compliance can coexist, provided the technical design is appropriate.
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StakeOrRegret
· 12h ago
Zero-knowledge proofs should have been popularized long ago; it's a bit late to discuss it now.
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GateUser-ccc36bc5
· 01-10 19:51
Zero-knowledge proofs sound good in theory, but how do they perform in practice?
The real question is, will regulators truly feel at ease? That's a big question mark.
But on the other hand, if true transparency and privacy can be balanced, that would be the right path.
Did a top-tier DEX with an average daily trading volume of $30 million not trigger any alerts? That's suspicious; we need to see if this is real data or just promotional rhetoric.
Zero-knowledge proof is fast, but the ecosystem is still far from mature.
Differential privacy is useless if a data vulnerability is exploited; everything could be ruined.
If this solution can really be promoted, financial privacy will have a chance to be saved. Right now, it's all just talk.
Technically, there's no problem, but the key is the regulator's attitude, which is the real critical point.
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ForkInTheRoad
· 01-10 19:49
Zero-knowledge proofs sound good in theory, but how do they work in practice?
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ParallelChainMaxi
· 01-10 19:44
Zero-knowledge proofs are indeed impressive, but the question is, will regulators really be at ease?
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GasFeeCry
· 01-10 19:39
Zero-knowledge proofs sound pretty amazing, but in practice, it still depends on how regulators feel about it.
Financial blockchain issues are often discussed: either open up completely and lose trade secrets, or hide tightly and face regulatory concerns. Is there a way to achieve both?
Technically, there is a solution. By combining zero-knowledge proofs with differential privacy, users can prove that a transaction is valid without revealing specific details. For example, in a loan approval scenario, one can prove that the applicant's credit score meets the threshold without exposing the actual score. Meanwhile, regulators hold the keys for backend audits—they can check at any time. This design is essentially the same as the EU GDPR's "data minimization" principle.
From a technical perspective, the verification speed of zero-knowledge proofs is in the millisecond range, much faster than Monero's ring signatures. Data shows that global financial data breaches cause an annual loss of $200 billion. Using this privacy solution can reduce the risk by over 90%.
There are many real-world cases. Last year, a leading DEX launched a privacy trading pool where users' transaction records are encrypted and stored securely, yet liquidity providers can still earn compliant returns. An institutional investor directly traded security tokens on the platform, with an average daily transaction volume exceeding $30 million, without triggering any regulatory alerts. This demonstrates that privacy and compliance can coexist, provided the technical design is appropriate.