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Every time an exchange collapses, the industry frantically promotes the concept of "Proof of Reserves." It sounds ideal—once the wallet addresses are published, users can sleep peacefully. But there's an awkward reality: for institutions like quantitative funds and market makers, fully disclosing holdings is equivalent to revealing all their secrets.
Think about it: once your position structure, leverage, and strategy details are visible to the entire internet, what could happen next? Someone might precisely calculate your liquidation price and organize a "hunt." I'm not joking—this is the true face of the market. So, truly large-scale institutions simply can't afford to reveal everything.
This is a deadlock. You need to prove you have money, but you can't really lay all your cards on the table.
An idea is changing this stalemate: using zero-knowledge proof technology to create a "solvency proof." The core logic is brilliant—institutions can generate a proof through cryptographic methods without revealing any sensitive information. This proof can tell the entire network: "My assets are indeed greater than my liabilities." This isn't a vague promise; every transaction can withstand mathematical verification.
Compared to current auditing methods, the difference is huge. Under traditional models, the Big Four audit firms spend months reconciling ledgers, and you have no idea whether those ledgers are genuine. Some exchanges occasionally release a PDF report, but no one can truly verify it. But this zero-knowledge proof-based verification is different—it can run continuously and automatically on the blockchain, performing mathematical-level validation every second.
Business confidentiality and fund transparency are no longer mortal enemies but are forcibly stitched together with code. This is the way to rebuild financial trust.