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Rule-friendly blockchain design often deserves more attention than feature stacking.
In a regulated financial environment, the issue is not whether the technology can be implemented, but whether the underlying architecture truly understands the rules. Can the processes be clearly explained? Can the rules be genuinely enforced? Who bears the responsibility? If these questions are not clarified early on, subsequent remedies will likely become hidden risks.
Many blockchain projects follow the approach of "develop technology first, consider compliance later." But there is also an alternative strategy: from day one, treat regulation as a permanent environmental variable rather than a future problem to solve. This may sound conservative, but in the financial sector, it is often a more pragmatic choice.
DUSK is a typical example in this regard. Its architecture is not about maximizing decentralization and freedom but about asking "how to operate stably within a compliance framework." This is directly reflected in several aspects:
First is the permission mechanism. Traditional blockchains often assume all participants are equal, but real finance is not like that. Different roles see different information scopes and bear different responsibilities. DUSK’s approach is to incorporate role differentiation into the system layer, rather than patch it at the application layer.
Second is the overall architectural complexity. If the goal is only simplicity, many designs can be cut. But DUSK chooses to retain this complexity because it is essential to support compliance requirements. This restraint from pursuing minimalism actually demonstrates a certain structural capability.
In the long term, such a design approach may not be amplified by market sentiment in the short term, but fundamentally, it lays a more solid foundation for stable development. For financial infrastructure tracks, sometimes conservatism is the most aggressive choice.