Sabitlenmiş Tweet

Many people in this space had their first meaningful airdrop experience with Aptos.
Now it looks like they’re working on something interesting again.
One issue that still hasn’t been fully solved is how much privacy institutions are actually comfortable with on-chain.
Regulators tend to push back against full anonymity.
But large financial players aren’t comfortable operating with zero privacy either.
For a long time, that middle ground basically disappeared.
Recently I noticed that Aptos Labs is preparing to introduce Confidential APT on mainnet.
Instead of hiding identities completely, the system focuses on encrypting balances and transaction amounts, while wallet addresses remain visible.
That kind of design might sit much closer to the level of privacy institutions could realistically accept on-chain.
What’s also interesting is that the approach looks like a full-stack privacy model:
• Keyless Accounts for identity-level privacy
• Confidential APT to keep balances private
• Encrypted mempool to reduce front-running risks
And since these confidentiality features are directly connected to Aptos, any real adoption would likely translate into increased usage of $APT itself.
Curious to see whether this kind of privacy-plus-compliance framework becomes the standard for institutional activity on-chain.

Aptos@Aptos
Confidential APT is coming to Aptos pending an upcoming governance vote. Institutional grade. Enabling compliant use-cases. Powering novel primitives across payments, trading, and asset management 💪
English










