2026 is called the Year of RWA, with increasing calls for institutional capital to enter the space, but the speed of actual on-chain deployment is always a step behind. Where exactly is the problem? Ultimately, it boils down to two words: trust.
Institutions require privacy protection—after all, transaction details and position information cannot be casually exposed, as this is part of their competitive edge. But they are equally afraid that privacy protections could turn into black boxes beyond regulatory reach. If on-chain transactions become completely transparent, what will compliance departments do? How will auditors verify asset authenticity? This contradiction is right there, causing many institutions to hesitate.
Privacy projects in the crypto space are not nonexistent, but few can survive long-term. The reason is very practical: regulators are not opposed to privacy per se—data protection is standard in traditional finance—they oppose completely untraceable transaction black holes. Some fully anonymous privacy coins have suffered from this—going fully private often results in delistings from exchanges, frozen funds, and both projects and users suffering as a result.
This is also why the concept of selective disclosure becomes crucial. It’s not a binary choice, but rather giving the power to choose: privacy is enabled by default, and audits are conducted on-demand, both controllable.
How does this work specifically? By using cryptographic tools like zero-knowledge proofs and homomorphic encryption. Sensitive data such as transaction amounts, holdings, and order intentions are encrypted externally and completely hidden from others. This is especially important for institutions—attacks like front-running rely on exposing intent. Once data is locked, such risks are greatly reduced.
The key turning point is this: when compliance or auditors need to verify, institutions can selectively generate proofs demonstrating that a transaction is compliant or that a position is genuine, without revealing the full transaction details. It’s like giving transactions a "trustworthy shell"—protecting privacy while providing regulators with a handle.
This design approach, in a sense, addresses the deepest trust issues in RWA on-chain. It’s not about hiding information with technology, but making information flow controllable and verifiable through technology. This might be the fundamental logic that truly encourages institutions to put their money on the chain.
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ChainMemeDealer
· 01-16 05:23
This zero-knowledge proof set, it sounds impressive but can it really be implemented? Feels like just talk on paper again.
Institutions still don't dare; trust isn't something technology can solve, it's a political issue.
Selective disclosure sounds like installing a camera for regulators—does privacy still count as privacy?
It's both a cryptographic tool and a trusted shell—feels like it's even further from true RWA.
At the core, the problem is that no one wants to be the first to take the plunge; no matter how good the technology is, someone has to go first.
This logic is a bit like trying to satisfy everyone, but in the end, no one agrees.
I understand, but the funds on the chain are still frozen—showing that trust hasn't been established at all.
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MoonlightGamer
· 01-15 22:43
This set of selective disclosure logic indeed hits the key point, but to be honest, it's still just a trust game.
Zero-knowledge proofs sound sexy, but will institutions really buy into it? It still seems to depend on regulatory approval.
This is the real key for RWA to take off; otherwise, no matter how fancy the technology is, it's all in vain.
The lessons from privacy coins are right there—completely blacked out results end up being reverse-engineered by exchanges.
The core issue is actually how to make institutions both invisible and visible at the same time. This thing is more complicated than it seems.
2026 will be a watershed moment; by then, we'll know whether this framework works or not.
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MissingSats
· 01-13 18:50
Basically, it's about finding a balance between regulation and privacy. This selective disclosure logic sounds pretty good.
Zero-knowledge proofs have been hyped for a while now; the key is who is actually using them and how well they are being used.
When it comes to institutional trust, rather than relying solely on technology, it's better to let real-world cases speak for themselves.
Honestly, RWA (Real-World Assets) truly going on-chain still takes time; don't be too optimistic.
This idea is interesting, but I'm worried it might eventually turn into a new compliance shell game.
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PermabullPete
· 01-13 18:45
Honestly, the set of zero-knowledge proofs is indeed clever, but will institutions really buy into it? It still feels like just talk on paper.
Selective disclosure sounds great, but in practice, the tug-of-war between regulation and privacy never ends.
Big institutions have been talking about entering the space for years, but so far it's more slogans than actions. Trust isn't something that's easily built.
Those privacy coins that were taken down are really unfortunate, but on the other hand, fully transparent on-chain data isn't very attractive to institutions either.
It seems like RWA in 2026 still needs to wait; it's not going to truly take off that quickly.
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PanicSeller
· 01-13 18:23
Basically, it's a trust issue. Institutions are afraid of transparency but also afraid of black boxes, caught in a dilemma...
The logic of selective disclosure sounds good, but how many institutions are truly willing to implement it?
I've been hearing about zero-knowledge proofs for so many years, but I still haven't seen large-scale applications...
As long as regulations remain unclear, institutions won't truly go on-chain, plain and simple.
It sounds great, but I bet five dollars that in 2026 it will still be all talk and little action.
2026 is called the Year of RWA, with increasing calls for institutional capital to enter the space, but the speed of actual on-chain deployment is always a step behind. Where exactly is the problem? Ultimately, it boils down to two words: trust.
Institutions require privacy protection—after all, transaction details and position information cannot be casually exposed, as this is part of their competitive edge. But they are equally afraid that privacy protections could turn into black boxes beyond regulatory reach. If on-chain transactions become completely transparent, what will compliance departments do? How will auditors verify asset authenticity? This contradiction is right there, causing many institutions to hesitate.
Privacy projects in the crypto space are not nonexistent, but few can survive long-term. The reason is very practical: regulators are not opposed to privacy per se—data protection is standard in traditional finance—they oppose completely untraceable transaction black holes. Some fully anonymous privacy coins have suffered from this—going fully private often results in delistings from exchanges, frozen funds, and both projects and users suffering as a result.
This is also why the concept of selective disclosure becomes crucial. It’s not a binary choice, but rather giving the power to choose: privacy is enabled by default, and audits are conducted on-demand, both controllable.
How does this work specifically? By using cryptographic tools like zero-knowledge proofs and homomorphic encryption. Sensitive data such as transaction amounts, holdings, and order intentions are encrypted externally and completely hidden from others. This is especially important for institutions—attacks like front-running rely on exposing intent. Once data is locked, such risks are greatly reduced.
The key turning point is this: when compliance or auditors need to verify, institutions can selectively generate proofs demonstrating that a transaction is compliant or that a position is genuine, without revealing the full transaction details. It’s like giving transactions a "trustworthy shell"—protecting privacy while providing regulators with a handle.
This design approach, in a sense, addresses the deepest trust issues in RWA on-chain. It’s not about hiding information with technology, but making information flow controllable and verifiable through technology. This might be the fundamental logic that truly encourages institutions to put their money on the chain.