Mainstream adoption won’t happen the way most people think. It’s not coming from fully public chains where every transaction, balance, and action is exposed by default.

That works for early users. It doesn’t work for everyone else.

People don’t want their salaries, savings, or spending habits visible to the world. Businesses don’t want competitors tracking their strategies in real time. Institutions won’t operate in environments where sensitive data is permanently public.

Privacy isn’t optional it’s required.

The real shift will happen on chains that make privacy the default, not an add-on. Systems where you can prove what matters without exposing everything else. Where users stay protected, but trust is still verifiable.

That’s the unlock for the internet of finance.

And this is where projects like @0xMiden stand out. Instead of patching privacy on top, it’s being built into the core execution, verification, and scalability designed with privacy in mind from day one.

Mainstream adoption won’t be loud and fully visible.

It will happen quietly on infrastructure that understands privacy isn’t a feature.

It’s the foundation.