When it comes to privacy chains, the first thought that often comes to mind is that of completely untraceable anonymous coins. But this approach simply doesn't work in the grand scheme of RWA (Real-World Asset Tokenization). When regulators are watching trillions of assets entering the blockchain, anything completely out of control will be directly dismissed.



The real challenge is actually quite tricky—financial institutions need to hide transaction intentions to prevent large players from sniping, while also being able to clearly account for their ledgers during regulatory audits. These two requirements seem contradictory, but Dusk Network's Hedger solution offers a new approach using homomorphic encryption technology.

**Breakthrough at the Technical Level**

Many projects talk about privacy and habitually mention zero-knowledge proofs. But zero-knowledge proofs solve the problem of "proving that I am telling the truth," whereas homomorphic encryption is about "performing calculations directly on encrypted data." In other words, your assets remain encrypted throughout on-chain transactions—outsiders cannot see balances or position changes, but the system can automatically perform deductions and settlements. This is not just a simple privacy tool; it’s more like a "forbidden room" reserved for institutions. Large transactions happen quietly here, undetectable to market predators, and only after everything settles can the results be seen.

**Why This Is the Path for Compliant Players**

Hedger does not completely block regulators at the door. Its design philosophy is: remain silent externally, but be fully transparent to the rules. Through hybrid encryption logic, it can protect transaction sovereignty while providing auditors with an access channel. This "silent operation with rule transparency" architecture is the true prerequisite for traditional finance to confidently move large-scale onto the chain.

Currently, most projects in the RWA track are still struggling with the question of "can assets be moved onto the chain," but this kind of technological innovation is already asking a second question: once assets are on-chain, how should institutions respond if they are targeted by large funds? How can they clearly explain during regulatory audits? Without solving these two issues, the so-called "financial on-chain" is just storytelling.
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