Dusk Protocol effectively reduces the risk exposure of the entire ecosystem by embedding compliance mechanisms at the smart contract layer. Its core relies on three technological innovations: selective disclosure allows users to provide necessary compliance proofs while protecting privacy; verifiable execution ensures that rules are automatically enforced on-chain rather than relying on manual judgment; controlled privacy strikes a balance between transparency and privacy protection. This system makes the operation of standardized finance more efficient, secure, and scalable, transforming processes that traditionally required大量中介和人工审核 into automated on-chain governance. For projects aiming to enter the institutional market, this protocol-level compliance design is obviously more competitive.

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RunWhenCutvip
· 01-19 06:10
This set of ideas sounds very right, but can it really be implemented? --- Compliance automation? Sounds good, but I'm worried it's just another PPT project. --- Finally, someone is seriously working on compliance layers, which is what institutions actually need. --- The selective disclosure part is interesting; it feels like they want to have their cake and eat it too. --- If you wanted to enter the institutional market, why didn't you do it earlier? Why only now? --- On-chain governance replacing manual review sounds great, but what about the reality? --- Dusk has really come up with some ideas this time; balancing transparency and privacy is no easy task.
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GreenCandleCollectorvip
· 01-19 03:08
The on-chain compliance logic, to put it simply, is about reassuring institutional players to feel confident to participate.
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ImpermanentTherapistvip
· 01-18 16:19
Sounds a bit exaggerated. Is automated governance really reliable? --- Another bunch of concepts wrapped up; let's see if they can truly be implemented later. --- Selective disclosure is indeed a clever approach. Can privacy and compliance be achieved simultaneously? --- It's just a marketing gimmick for institutional-level markets; the key is adoption. --- Intermediaries will be crying, but can this gas fee be sustained? --- Sounds good, but in actual operation, there will definitely be a bunch of issues. --- Interesting, finally a project that wants to coexist with both regulation and privacy. --- I am optimistic about verifiable execution; it saves effort. --- No matter how much you hype it up, real data has to speak.
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SignatureLiquidatorvip
· 01-17 07:59
On-chain automation? Sounds good, but can it really evade regulation?
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CexIsBadvip
· 01-17 07:59
To be honest, this compliance design is quite interesting, but on-chain automatic execution still sounds a bit uncertain.
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SelfSovereignStevevip
· 01-17 07:58
Compliance mechanisms are anchored on the chain, this is the right way to go. --- I like the selective disclosure part; privacy and compliance can finally coexist. --- Automated on-chain governance saves a lot of hassle from black-box reviews. --- Institutional-grade markets rely on this kind of design; the traditional financial approach should be phased out. --- Basically, it's replacing manual reviews with code audits, and the efficiency has increased by an order of magnitude. --- Controlled privacy is quite interesting; finally found the balance point.
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WenMoonvip
· 01-17 07:57
Achieving both privacy compliance and transparency—this is the institutional-level approach --- Wait, is on-chain automation really reliable? Are there no vulnerabilities? --- Selective disclosure has some real substance; finally, no need to choose between privacy and KYC --- It sounds like automated governance, but honestly, it still depends on how well the code is written --- Will institutions really buy into this? It seems like it still depends on regulatory attitudes --- Verifiable execution + controlled privacy, this combo really works well --- Is protocol-level design enough to enter the institutional market? It feels like something is still missing --- This is the way Web3 should look --- Intermediaries are really going to become unemployed --- Balancing privacy and transparency sounds easy in theory but hard in practice
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MeaninglessGweivip
· 01-17 07:50
This is the right way, perfectly balancing compliance and privacy.
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bridge_anxietyvip
· 01-17 07:47
Alright, it seems compliance can also be handled on-chain. --- Another automation solution, intermediaries are about to lose their jobs again, huh. --- I’m a bit confused about the selective disclosure part—how can it be both private and compliant? --- Institutions have wanted to get in for a long time; they don’t need this set of things, right? --- Finally, someone is taking compliance seriously. Stop pushing the boundaries. --- These three innovations sound good, but how do they work in practice? --- Smart contracts automatically execute rules? What if the rules themselves are flawed?
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Ser_APY_2000vip
· 01-17 07:30
Wow, this is the right way. Finally, someone has figured out how to handle compliance properly.
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