Privacy blockchains have long faced challenges in institutional applications: either lacking complete privacy or impacting transaction efficiency and costs. However, recently a project's solution has begun to show feasibility.
The mainnet has been stable for over a year, achieving efficient confidential transaction confirmation through the Zedger consensus mechanism. The key is that gas costs remain consistently very low—crucial for institutional applications requiring high-frequency trading.
The most interesting aspect at the technical level is the design of the privacy module in the EVM-compatible layer. Developers can write contracts using Solidity, a familiar language, and enable zero-knowledge proof protection with just a few lines of configuration. What does this mean? Sensitive information such as transaction amounts, address associations, and fund flows are completely hidden from external view, while internal audits and regulatory channels remain transparent—this is a critical requirement for RWA tokenization scenarios. Compared to traditional public chains that are either fully transparent or fully private, this configurable privacy mode is more practically meaningful.
In terms of ecosystem collaboration, deep integration with oracles is also accelerating application deployment. Cross-chain protocols enable tokenized assets to move across chains, and real-time data feeds provide a foundation for institutional-grade applications. Looking ahead to 2026, more compliant DeFi applications and privacy infrastructure projects are expected to be deployed on this chain, making the ecosystem's vitality worth watching.
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AlwaysAnon
· 01-12 06:03
Low gas fees combined with zero-knowledge proofs, this is indeed what institutional-level players have been waiting for.
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CoffeeNFTs
· 01-11 14:53
The era of low gas fee gaming has arrived, finally no more wallet worries for each transaction.
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AirdropHunter9000
· 01-10 00:56
The configurable privacy feature is brilliant; finally, someone has balanced compliance and efficiency well.
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NotFinancialAdvice
· 01-09 07:01
Wait, can the gas costs really stay this low? It sounds a bit unbelievable... But if Zedger consensus can really be achieved, institutions should be flocking to it.
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GmGnSleeper
· 01-09 06:57
Wait a minute, the gas fee being this low is indeed a bit interesting... But can Zedger's mechanism really hold up, or is it just another hype?
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TokenomicsTinfoilHat
· 01-09 06:56
Alright, alright, it's all about privacy chains and zero-knowledge proofs again. I'm tired of hearing about them... But the low gas fee aspect really caught my attention. Previously, those projects hyped everything up, but the fees were ridiculously high.
If this can truly run stably for over a year, it means it's at least not so superficial. EVM compatibility makes things easier, and configurable privacy is somewhat interesting—better than those players who see it as either/or.
But to be honest, will institutions really use it? That's the key question.
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StopLossMaster
· 01-09 06:55
It's another story of "solving the contradiction between privacy and efficiency." I've heard it many times before. Is this time reliable?
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ReverseTradingGuru
· 01-09 06:53
Here we go again with the "want... and want..." narrative, which is getting a bit tiresome. However, the combination of low gas + privacy really hits the pain points of institutions. I'm just worried it might be just on paper; the mainnet has been stable for over a year—what does that really mean? We need to look at actual TVL and trading volume, I'm not just playing devil's advocate.
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DogeBachelor
· 01-09 06:47
Finally, someone has solved the contradiction between privacy and efficiency. Those previous solutions that were either ineffective or prohibitively expensive were really frustrating.
This Zedger mechanism actually has some substance; keeping gas costs low is the key to success.
What makes configurable privacy awesome? Basically, it's about reassuring institutions, keeping information private for retail investors, open for regulators, and still able to write in Solidity... This approach is definitely smarter than those all-or-nothing projects.
If cross-chain can truly stabilize, the story of RWA might really take off.
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SerumDegen
· 01-09 06:44
ngl, the "configurable privacy" angle sounds like they're trying to sell us the best of both worlds... which historically means neither works when the cascade happens. been there, seen the liquidation.
Privacy blockchains have long faced challenges in institutional applications: either lacking complete privacy or impacting transaction efficiency and costs. However, recently a project's solution has begun to show feasibility.
The mainnet has been stable for over a year, achieving efficient confidential transaction confirmation through the Zedger consensus mechanism. The key is that gas costs remain consistently very low—crucial for institutional applications requiring high-frequency trading.
The most interesting aspect at the technical level is the design of the privacy module in the EVM-compatible layer. Developers can write contracts using Solidity, a familiar language, and enable zero-knowledge proof protection with just a few lines of configuration. What does this mean? Sensitive information such as transaction amounts, address associations, and fund flows are completely hidden from external view, while internal audits and regulatory channels remain transparent—this is a critical requirement for RWA tokenization scenarios. Compared to traditional public chains that are either fully transparent or fully private, this configurable privacy mode is more practically meaningful.
In terms of ecosystem collaboration, deep integration with oracles is also accelerating application deployment. Cross-chain protocols enable tokenized assets to move across chains, and real-time data feeds provide a foundation for institutional-grade applications. Looking ahead to 2026, more compliant DeFi applications and privacy infrastructure projects are expected to be deployed on this chain, making the ecosystem's vitality worth watching.