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Stablecoins are extremely popular, but it's easy to say—trying to get businesses on-chain for transfers? That's a different story.
Retail investors use U transfers for convenience and speed, but are listed companies daring to do the same? A million-dollar transaction on-chain, with all data transparent—competitors can directly see your cash flow and gross profit margin—what is this called? This is called "all your cards are on the table." From a business perspective, this is an absolute minefield.
That's why this is the real problem Dusk aims to solve. The confidential payment scheme it develops has a straightforward core logic: companies can perform large-scale fund transfers on-chain, while using zero-knowledge proofs to hide transaction amounts and counterparty identities. But this isn't true anonymity— the system retains an "audit key" for compliance parties to review.
Look at this design: it combines the confidentiality of cash with the compliance requirements of banks. This dual approach to payments is the prerequisite for B2B to truly migrate to blockchain. Frankly, privacy payments here are not something to hide but a standard for protecting corporate trade secrets. Looking at this trillion-dollar payment market, the track is enormous.
Privacy payments are indeed a necessity; otherwise, publicly listed companies might as well not be on the chain at all.
The design of zero-knowledge proofs combined with an audit key is really quite clever.
The track is indeed large, but can Dusk make it out...
By the way, how many companies are really considering on-chain B2B transfers now?
Just the compliance hurdle alone can kill a bunch of projects.
Dusk's approach is indeed brilliant; the set of audit keys really strikes a perfect balance.
Speaking of which, there aren't many listed companies willing to take the plunge now.
This logic should have been implemented long ago; I've been waiting for this solution so long that I'm exhausted.
Why hasn't anyone thought of applying zero-knowledge proofs to B2B payments... No, it's not that no one thought of it, but no one dares to push it.
The current question is who will be the first to use it. Once a benchmark case appears, this will explode.
It's called privacy payments in a nice way; in a harsh way, it's about competitors not being able to see through you. But isn't that exactly what enterprises are eager for?
This is true market understanding—it's not about hiding dirt, but simply protecting oneself.
Compared to those boastful privacy coin projects, Dusk really has something.
I agree with the idea of Dusk; privacy + compliance are indeed necessary for enterprises, but the zero-knowledge proof system is still too abstract for ordinary people.
Privacy payments are either something that can't see the light or just common business sense.
By the way, can this trillion-dollar market really be divided...
The day enterprises truly go on-chain might still be far off; that wall of traditional finance isn't that easy to break down.