In recent years, everyone has been competing on TPS, performance, and narratives, but the real concern in the real world is not "how many transactions per second" but:
🔹 How to verify identity 🔹 How to layer permissions 🔹 How to build trust 🔹 How to automate compliance If a blockchain can only handle completely public data, it will always serve only a small group of people. Enterprises, institutions, and traditional finance simply can't get in. So I increasingly believe that the true breakthrough is not a faster chain, but the ability to embed privacy and compliance at the protocol layer. Allowing real-world rules to run directly on the chain. @RialoHQ This direction is correct. It's not about creating a more lively playground, but about trying to make blockchain truly "usable."
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In recent years, everyone has been competing on TPS, performance, and narratives, but the real concern in the real world is not "how many transactions per second" but:
🔹 How to verify identity
🔹 How to layer permissions
🔹 How to build trust
🔹 How to automate compliance
If a blockchain can only handle completely public data, it will always serve only a small group of people. Enterprises, institutions, and traditional finance simply can't get in.
So I increasingly believe that the true breakthrough is not a faster chain, but the ability to embed privacy and compliance at the protocol layer. Allowing real-world rules to run directly on the chain.
@RialoHQ This direction is correct. It's not about creating a more lively playground, but about trying to make blockchain truly "usable."