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Most people are still celebrating the ups and downs of Meme coins and paying for the speed story of Layer2, while a deeper game has quietly started. The Walrus project uses a set of cutting-edge cryptographic solutions aimed at the most vulnerable parts of all mainstream public chains—privacy.
Its approach is quite interesting: instead of patching from top to bottom, it’s better to rebuild from the ground up. Existing privacy solutions, whether mixers or zero-knowledge proofs, are essentially like putting a film on a glass house—they address the surface but not the root problem. Walrus has chosen a more aggressive path.
The core of the technology is a single term—"K-Anonymity Set." Simply put, whenever a transaction is sent out, the system automatically generates a large virtual transaction group to drown it. This is completely different from Monero waiting for enough transactions to achieve mixing effects. Your transfer no longer stands out as a single clue but instantly merges into a sea of thousands of people. For on-chain monitoring, it’s like finding a needle in a haystack—almost impossible.
The ambition of this solution is: it does not intend to replace any existing public chain but aims to become the privacy foundational layer for all mainstream chains. Like a parasite embedding itself into the system, silently siphoning off the most valuable transaction flows. This approach has indeed made many core developers of mainstream chains sit up and take notice.
A purely technical innovation project, but its potential to change the rules should not be underestimated.