Imagine proving you are old enough to enter a building without showing your ID card. The guard only knows the rule is satisfied — but your personal information stays private.

What if blockchain worked the same way?

What if blockchain privacy didn’t mean hiding everything, but proving facts without exposing personal data?

I’ve been thinking about this while reading about Midnight Network and its token $NIGHT ...

What if blockchain privacy didn’t mean hiding everything, but proving facts without exposing personal data?

I’ve been thinking about this while reading about Midnight Network and its token $NIGHT . Many chains are either fully transparent or extremely private, which can create trade-offs. What interests me here is the idea of using zero-knowledge proofs so something can be verified without revealing sensitive details.

From my perspective, approaches like programmable privacy could help balance transparency and data protection as more real-world applications explore blockchain systems.

Do you think privacy-focused infrastructure will become essential for wider blockchain adoption?

#night $NIGHT @MidnightNetwork