BlackBox ◼️

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BlackBox ◼️

BlackBox ◼️

@BlackBoxCore

Cross-Chain Confidentiality. Deposit once, withdraw anywhere, anytime. https://t.co/zNcRZ0Mw4m

Katılım Şubat 2026
13 Takip Edilen57 Takipçiler
BlackBox ◼️
BlackBox ◼️@BlackBoxCore·
Most bridges are a tax on your privacy. You pay high gas fees only to have your wallet "clustered" by analysis bots within seconds. That’s a 0% ROI on your security. Blackbox uses asynchronous execution and threshold security to give you 100% privacy. Stop paying to be watched. Start moving for real.
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BlackBox ◼️
BlackBox ◼️@BlackBoxCore·
Agentic payments are already happening at scale. Every transaction your agent makes is permanently visible on-chain. BlackBox gives agents the same confidentiality guarantee as human users. Deposit on one chain. Withdraw on another. No on-chain link between the two.
BlackBox ◼️ tweet media
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BlackBox ◼️
BlackBox ◼️@BlackBoxCore·
@nero_eth Stealth addresses solve the recipient discovery problem. The transaction graph link between sender and recipient still exists on-chain. OTS keys sever that link, which is the missing piece for interactions with no traceable history
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BlackBox ◼️
BlackBox ◼️@BlackBoxCore·
BlackBox is built for agents too Any AI agent can deposit, claim keys, and withdraw privately across chains.
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BlackBox ◼️
BlackBox ◼️@BlackBoxCore·
Confidentiality without fungibility is still a half-solution. Most privacy tools on Ethereum solve the unlinkability problem but leave your withdrawn assets tainted and blocked by exchanges. BlackBox adds the missing piece. OTS keys sever the deposit-withdrawal link with no trusted setup, and the clean withdrawal pool means your assets stay accepted everywhere.
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Ethereum
Ethereum@ethereum·
0/ Privacy in the Ethereum ecosystem is undergoing an evolution. A Renaissance, even, to sound a bit fancy. What exactly is behind these changes and how might neo-Cypherpunk be involved? A guest thread by @post_polar_ and @nicksvyaznoy.
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BlackBox ◼️
BlackBox ◼️@BlackBoxCore·
Imagine if your Uber driver could see every transaction you ever made before picking you up. That is what DeFi protocols see when you connect your wallet.
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BlackBox ◼️
BlackBox ◼️@BlackBoxCore·
@dreyart01 The transactions do show on Solscan. What does not show is the connection between your deposit and your withdrawal. Anyone watching sees two separate, unrelated transactions with no trail connecting them.
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Drey
Drey@dreyart01·
@BlackBoxCore that means I can make transactions on Solana without them actually showing up on solscan?
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BlackBox ◼️
BlackBox ◼️@BlackBoxCore·
Your employer pays you in crypto. Every colleague with your wallet address sees your exact salary. Every bonus. Every deduction. Does that seem acceptable to you? On-chain salary payments are a real use case. On-chain salary privacy is a real problem. BlackBox solves it.
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BlackBox ◼️
BlackBox ◼️@BlackBoxCore·
@mokamoka1616353 Correct. The transaction is publicly verifiable on-chain. What disappears is the link between sender and recipient, and the amount correlation. Your counterparty knows they received funds. Nobody else knows how much, from whom, or from which chain it came.
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Anubiscrypt
Anubiscrypt@mokamoka1616353·
@BlackBoxCore Keep the act clean but keep it private when it comes to how much someone received It’s clean money but the amount isn’t disclosed ?
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BlackBox ◼️
BlackBox ◼️@BlackBoxCore·
@dreyart01 Monero offers privacy into the base layer. BlackBox brings it to every EVM chain and Solana without leaving the ecosystem you already use. And unlike mixers, withdrawn assets stay clean and accepted everywhere.
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BlackBox ◼️ retweetledi
BlackBox ◼️
BlackBox ◼️@BlackBoxCore·
@VitalikButerin The privacy-preserving CDP question is one of the hardest problems in DeFi right now. The core issue is that confidentiality and fungibility usually conflict. Most privacy tools solve one and break the other.
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BlackBox ◼️
BlackBox ◼️@BlackBoxCore·
Two types of users want on-chain privacy Those who want it to just work, and those who want to control every parameter. Easy and Pro mode Now live on testnet
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Toni Wahrstätter ⟠
Toni Wahrstätter ⟠@nero_eth·
AI agents need privacy, and Ethereum can provide it. Here’s a clip of two autonomous agents discovering each other, generating stealth addresses, and interacting privately on Ethereum. More details in the 🧵👇
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Edgy - The DeFi Edge 🗡️
Edgy - The DeFi Edge 🗡️@thedefiedge·
That "anon" wallet you think is clean? It's two clicks from your KYC'd CEX withdrawal. All because you used a bridge. I don’t know about you, but I don’t like giving noisy people any access. That "anon" wallet you think is clean is two clicks from your KYC'd CEX withdrawal the moment you bridge between them. Found a simple solution. @BungeeExchange just shipped Incognito mode to break it. You toggle it on, and your send and receiving wallets won't have a direct on-chain link between them. It's powered by @HoudiniSwap, which routes through regulated exchanges to break the public trace. Works across 21+ chains and 100+ tokens. What's the catch? The only tradeoff is slightly higher fees (~1.5 to 2%) and a bit more time for settlement. It's not full anonymity, but it's practical privacy built into a bridge many people already use. Privacy isn't about having something to hide. I'm simply not trying to give random people a map of your finances.
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BlackBox ◼️
BlackBox ◼️@BlackBoxCore·
@pcaversaccio Privacy that requires perfect behavior isn't privacy. Most people will fail it. The protocol shouldn't let them.
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sudo rm -rf --no-preserve-root /
so right now transacting privately (=nobody can link your onchain movements to your identity) on Ethereum requires way too much operational overhead. You need to understand behavioural profiling, manage VPNs (always use kill switches), mix user agents and language settings of your browser (so many services log this), avoid hosted UIs and run apps locally if possible. I mean guys, let's be real, that's not real privacy. Ethereum (including its applications) must let users be _imperfect_, not flawless opsec experts, and still remain private. If avoiding surveillance depends on perfect discipline, the protocol and its applications have fundamentally failed to provide it. We're nowhere near solving this.
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