Most of the blockchain data that people come into contact with is already in a public state. But the real opportunity actually lies on the client side—transactions are privately executed locally, then verified on-chain using zero-knowledge proofs. This not only ensures privacy but also allows compliant finance to integrate seamlessly. Even more impressively, this solution can support unlimited levels of throughput, backed by quantum-resistant technology, completely transforming the performance bottleneck of traditional blockchains. The alpha testnet is already live, and if you're interested, you can try it out yourself.

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TradingNightmarevip
· 01-18 15:52
The set of zero-knowledge proof methods indeed has some real value, but the claims about quantum resistance are a bit exaggerated.
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governance_lurkervip
· 01-17 06:16
Zero-knowledge proofs sound really powerful, but in practice, could it be a different story when actually implemented?
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LucidSleepwalkervip
· 01-16 04:57
Zero-knowledge proofs are truly amazing; they break through privacy and performance simultaneously. Finally, a team has figured out this key point.
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GateUser-5854de8bvip
· 01-16 04:56
Zero-knowledge proofs are indeed an interesting approach, but there are too many projects being hyped now. How many of them can truly achieve quantum resistance?
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GovernancePretendervip
· 01-16 04:55
Zero-knowledge proofs are truly excellent. Local execution + on-chain verification, achieving both privacy and compliance—this is the direction I've always wanted to see.
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HalfPositionRunnervip
· 01-16 04:30
Haha, finally someone said it. Zero-knowledge proofs are indeed the next big trend.
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