Many people’s understanding of privacy transactions still remains at the simple binary of "anonymous vs. public." But Dusk Network’s approach is a bit different—they introduce the Phoenix transaction model at the transaction layer, attempting to find a balance between privacy protection and transaction verification.



The logic behind this design actually comes from real-world financial scenarios. Think about it— in real financial transactions, things like price conditions, counterparty information, and intermediate states should not be publicly disclosed to everyone. But the problem is, the system still needs to verify whether the transaction is legitimate and whether data has been tampered with. This is a contradiction.

The strength of the Phoenix model lies in its non-extreme approach. Unlike some privacy solutions that turn into completely unauditably black boxes, Phoenix allows transaction verification to be triggered under compliance conditions, without breaking privacy boundaries. In other words, privacy and regulation are not necessarily mortal enemies. This design makes Phoenix more suitable for handling the transaction processes of regulated assets, not just pure cryptocurrency transfers.

From a system architecture perspective, Phoenix does not exist in isolation. It works in concert with Dusk’s contract system and asset model. The privacy protections at the transaction layer pave the way for confidential contracts and privacy tokens at higher layers, ensuring that privacy capabilities remain consistent across different levels.

To put it simply, the value of the Phoenix model does not lie in technical tricks alone, but in its ability to genuinely address the practical needs of financial applications—building an executable structure between privacy and verification. This is the key to providing a more suitable transaction foundation for the Dusk network in financial scenarios.
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