# Сопутствующие статьи по теме privacy

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "privacy", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

From Aztec to Zcash: Privacy Evolving from 'Gray Industry Tool' to 'Institutional Necessity'

From Aztec to Zcash: The Rise of Pragmatic Privacy in Blockchain In 2025, blockchain privacy evolved from a niche concern to a mainstream priority, driven by the concept of "pragmatic privacy" that balances individual anonymity with regulatory compliance. This shift is marked by the strong performance of privacy-focused assets like Zcash and new institutional initiatives. Several new privacy-centric blockchains launched or advanced significantly. Aztec Network's Ignition L2 mainnet went live, raising over 6,100 ETH. Nillion launched its "blind computer" mainnet for encrypted data computation. Cosmos-based Namada introduced a "composable privacy" L1, while Miden spun out from Polygon to build its own privacy chain. Umbra raised $154.9 million in an ICO to build on Solana. Horzen transitioned to a Base L3 privacy solution. Institutions are actively embracing privacy. Coinbase hired a team from Iron Fish to develop privacy primitives for Base. Circle is testing a privacy-preserving wrapped USDC (USDCx) on Aleo. The Canton Network and EY's Nightfall L2 are focusing on confidential enterprise solutions. The Ethereum Foundation formed a dedicated "Privacy Cluster" and an "Institutional Privacy Working Group." Vitalik Buterin also launched Kohaku, an open-source wallet framework for compliant privacy. At the application layer, tools like 0xbow's Privacy Pools (based on Vitalik's research) and Railgun (using "proof of innocence") allow users to anonymize transactions without aiding illicit activity. Zcash's shielded pool supply grew to nearly 25%, indicating steady adoption. This collective progress signals that privacy is no longer a marginal feature but a core institutional and user requirement.

比推12/26 22:33

From Aztec to Zcash: Privacy Evolving from 'Gray Industry Tool' to 'Institutional Necessity'

比推12/26 22:33

Written at the End of 2025: Code, Power, and Stablecoins

By the end of 2025, stablecoins have firmly established themselves, with a market cap surpassing $300 billion—a growth of nearly $100 billion in under a year. This growth reflects institutional confidence, with major banks projecting multi-trillion dollar valuations in the coming years. Stablecoins are no longer just a crypto narrative but a fundamental shift in monetary infrastructure, built on code and verifiable trust rather than opaque intermediaries. The failure of Synapse highlighted the risks of traditional fintech: hidden counterparty risk and unverifiable accounting. In contrast, self-custodied stablecoins eliminate intermediary risk, though issuer risk remains—mitigated by transparent reserve proofs and on-chain monitoring. Stablecoins enable global reach from day one, bypassing the need for localized banking infrastructure. The bottleneck remains fiat on/off-ramps, but modular solutions allow for gradual integration. New purpose-built blockchains like Tempo and Arc aim to optimize payments but face trust barriers compared to battle-tested networks like Ethereum and Solana. Agentic finance presents a near-term opportunity in automating mundane financial tasks, with smart contracts enabling secure, permission-bound automation. However, security remains critical: rapid growth must not compromise operational rigor. Privacy is another key challenge, as real-world business adoption requires selective disclosure—proving compliance without exposing sensitive data. The true potential of stablecoins lies beyond replicating existing fintech—it’s in unlocking programmable money, internet-native capital markets, and reimagining financial services through verifiable, autonomous systems.

比推12/26 19:38

Written at the End of 2025: Code, Power, and Stablecoins

比推12/26 19:38

What Should the New Financial Infrastructure of the AI Era Look Like?

The article explores the limitations of current prediction markets, which, despite their success in aggregating information through risk-sharing (e.g., accurately predicting election outcomes), suffer from a flawed economic model: their most valuable output—information—becomes a free public good once generated. This restricts their viability to entertainment-driven domains like elections and sports, while critical areas (geopolitical risk, regulatory outcomes, etc.) remain unaddressed. The author proposes "Cognitive Finance," a new infrastructure designed from first principles for the AI and crypto era. Key components include: - **Private Markets**: Using trusted execution environments (TEEs) to keep prices confidential, enabling entities (e.g., hedge funds, corporations) to pay for exclusive signals without leakage to competitors. - **Combinatorial Markets**: Moving beyond isolated events to maintain a joint probability distribution, where trades update correlated outcomes simultaneously, akin to a neural network. - **Agent Ecosystems**: AI-native markets where specialized agents (trading, evaluation, information acquisition) operate with strict isolation between price access and information sourcing to prevent self-cannibalization. - **Human Intelligence**: Interfaces allowing humans to contribute knowledge via natural language without seeing prices, compensated based on predictive accuracy. The vision is a decentralized, composable infrastructure where AI systems and humans collaboratively build a continuously updated, probabilistic world model. This transcends today’s prediction markets, aiming to transform decision-making in finance, supply chains, geopolitics, and beyond by making uncertainty tradable and knowledge liquid.

marsbit12/26 11:06

What Should the New Financial Infrastructure of the AI Era Look Like?

marsbit12/26 11:06

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