A thought crossed my mind recently — we’ve always assumed everything on-chain must be visible to be trusted.
While exploring @MidnightNetwork , what stood out to me is how it separates public and private state. Some parts stay open for verification, while sensitive logic remains hidden but still functional within the system.
Why This Changes Things
From my perspective, this removes a big limitation in current Web3 design.
Right now, you either expose everything or move off-chain. But this hybrid approach allows both privacy and trust to exist together.
If this evolves properly, it could unlock more natural use cases — not just for traders, but for real-world adoption too.
If this works the way it’s designed, it could open the door for more complex strategies, cross-app interactions, and real use cases — without turning everything into a public footprint.
Still early, but this idea feels more practical than most “privacy narratives” I’ve seen.
Curious — do you think this balance between privacy and transparency is where crypto is heading?
