$ROBO Third Phase Rewards Have Been Distributed 🎊
Although my ranking isn't high, I made it to the list in all three phases ✌🏻
Total: 550 + 471 + 297 = 1318u 🤑
Thanks to the creator platform and the conscientious project team ❤️
This is a project that has once again become legendary, aside from $DUSK
The first time I was convinced by Midnight was because it even considered “not exposing behavior for paying gas fees”
To be honest, I used to have some prejudice against privacy projects: either they talk big but only protect the “story” without safeguarding the “usage,” or they hide everything from the start and end up being misinterpreted as gray tools. Recently, I took another look at @MidnightNetwork and was instead touched by a very small detail: it not only aims to keep data private but also wants to ensure that “the act of paying” doesn’t expose your behavioral trails. Because many chains, even if your content is private, your transaction paths for paying fees remain transparent, and others can still infer what you’re doing from the fee layer.
Midnight's approach is more like: for privacy to be callably integrated into daily life, it’s necessary to contain the places where behaviors are most easily leaked. It uses NIGHT to generate DUST, which is non-transferable and will decay; it’s just an execution resource, not a value asset. You can understand it as a continuously replenished gas fee quota rather than a chip for trading. For ordinary users, at least this clarifies the boundaries: privacy serves data and computation, not the anonymous transfer of value.
I checked the latest market data, and NIGHT is around $0.046, with a 24-hour trading volume close to $960 million, circulating approximately 16.607 billion tokens, maximum supply 24 billion tokens, and a market cap of around $770 million. The hype isn’t low, but retail investors are most afraid of mistaking hype for necessity.
I’m willing to give it some positives: a more restrained approach and details that are closer to real usage. The negatives are also very real: the more “privacy is made a default capability,” the more it tests wallet and application experience, as users don’t want to learn a bunch of new concepts. For us small investors, my suggestion is not to rush to choose sides but to first observe two things: whether the application side truly uses it as a privacy tool and whether the DUST resource model can be easily understood in wallets. What do you think is the easiest thing to leak about privacy: the content itself or the payment and behavioral trails?
@MidnightNetwork $NIGHT #night
Although my ranking isn't high, I made it to the list in all three phases ✌🏻
Total: 550 + 471 + 297 = 1318u 🤑
Thanks to the creator platform and the conscientious project team ❤️
This is a project that has once again become legendary, aside from $DUSK
The first time I was convinced by Midnight was because it even considered “not exposing behavior for paying gas fees”
To be honest, I used to have some prejudice against privacy projects: either they talk big but only protect the “story” without safeguarding the “usage,” or they hide everything from the start and end up being misinterpreted as gray tools. Recently, I took another look at @MidnightNetwork and was instead touched by a very small detail: it not only aims to keep data private but also wants to ensure that “the act of paying” doesn’t expose your behavioral trails. Because many chains, even if your content is private, your transaction paths for paying fees remain transparent, and others can still infer what you’re doing from the fee layer.
Midnight's approach is more like: for privacy to be callably integrated into daily life, it’s necessary to contain the places where behaviors are most easily leaked. It uses NIGHT to generate DUST, which is non-transferable and will decay; it’s just an execution resource, not a value asset. You can understand it as a continuously replenished gas fee quota rather than a chip for trading. For ordinary users, at least this clarifies the boundaries: privacy serves data and computation, not the anonymous transfer of value.
I checked the latest market data, and NIGHT is around $0.046, with a 24-hour trading volume close to $960 million, circulating approximately 16.607 billion tokens, maximum supply 24 billion tokens, and a market cap of around $770 million. The hype isn’t low, but retail investors are most afraid of mistaking hype for necessity.
I’m willing to give it some positives: a more restrained approach and details that are closer to real usage. The negatives are also very real: the more “privacy is made a default capability,” the more it tests wallet and application experience, as users don’t want to learn a bunch of new concepts. For us small investors, my suggestion is not to rush to choose sides but to first observe two things: whether the application side truly uses it as a privacy tool and whether the DUST resource model can be easily understood in wallets. What do you think is the easiest thing to leak about privacy: the content itself or the payment and behavioral trails?
@MidnightNetwork $NIGHT #night
