@MidnightNetwork

I think Midnight may be strongest where users need to prove they qualify for something without exposing who they are to everyone watching.A lot of discussion around Midnight stays at the privacy level. That makes sense, but it can miss the more useful point. The real value may not be “hide all data.” The real value may be letting an app check whether someone is eligible, authorized, or allowed to act without turning that person into a public identity trail. That is a very different kind of utility. It matters for access control, role-based approvals, compliance checks, and any workflow where the system needs proof of status more than full visibility of the user.That is why Midnight feels more interesting to me as a permission layer than as a simple privacy story.The implication is bigger than it first looks. If Midnight works well here, it could make older blockchain habits feel clumsy, because too many systems still tie authority to visible accounts and traceable activity. Midnight is trying to change that. Instead of exposing the person and then granting access, it can move toward proving the right to act without exposing the identity behind it. That is where Midnight may become genuinely useful. Not just for hiding information, but for enforcing rules without forcing users to leave public identity trails every time they interact.

@MidnightNetwork $NIGHT #night

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