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Privacy for institutions has never been an "optional feature" but a baseline requirement. Without privacy, institutions simply won't get on the table. I once discussed public blockchains with a compliance officer, and he shut me down with one sentence: "Can our competitors see our account balances?"
Honestly: on a fully public chain, everything is visible and crystal clear.
But if you revert to a completely closed private chain, liquidity drops to zero—that's like locking yourself in a small black room.
This contradiction isn't really a technical issue; it's a structural barrier.
This time, @zksync's launch of Prividium has effectively filled in more than half of this barrier.
It's a licensed permissioned chain built on a Validium architecture based on ZK Stack.
All execution, state, balances, and transaction details stay within the institution's controllable environment (off-chain), revealing no information externally;
Only the "state root" and "zero-knowledge proof" are periodically packaged and submitted to @ethereum, with Ethereum performing the final verification and settlement.
In simple terms, it's like separating the transaction hall from the court:
Operations run in a secure, access-controlled enclosed space, with clear permission divisions, RPC accessed via proxies, and audits provided on demand;
Every transaction and batch is cryptographically sealed before being submitted to Ethereum, the "neutral ledger," for final confirmation.
I privately call it "the banking operating system on Ethereum."
Three main features of Prividium:
- Private infrastructure: enabling institutions to work behind closed doors
- Ethereum-level security and settlement: finality guaranteed mathematically, not based on promises
- Native connectivity: direct communication within the Elastic Network, no external bridges needed, preventing liquidity fragmentation
Compared to traditional private chains, it isn't isolated;
Compared to independent L1s, it doesn't compete with Ethereum but "leverages" Ethereum, extending institutional capabilities outward.
The core question now is:
Are regulators and institutional funds willing to trust this dual-track design of "privacy off-chain, finality on-chain"?
Could it instead become a new trust anchor—protecting business secrets while maintaining Ethereum's global liquidity and verifiability?
I personally see it positively. This could be the first reliable key for institutions to truly put large funds on-chain.
Not just hype, but a real sense of security that can integrate into existing systems without risking explosion.
What do you think?
Which resonates more with institutions—privacy or connectivity?