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The more I look into how global finance actually works, the easier it is to understand why institutions are starting to take onchain infrastructure seriously.
A huge amount of the current system still depends on intermediaries, delayed settlement, separate ledgers, and capital sitting idle across correspondent banking networks just to maintain coordination between parties. It works, but it’s inefficient at a scale most people never see directly.
What makes Prividium interesting to me is that it approaches the problem from an institutional angle instead of the usual crypto narrative.
Banks and large financial firms can’t operate on fully transparent systems without privacy, compliance controls, and predictable execution environments. That’s where the combination of Prividium and @zksync starts to make more sense. Using zero knowledge proofs while settling on Ethereum creates a model that feels closer to what institutions would realistically require if financial activity moves onchain over time.
I don’t think the shift happens overnight, but it’s becoming harder to ignore how outdated parts of the current infrastructure really are.

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