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Solana Foundation Introduces New Privacy Framework for Institutions
According to Mars Finance, reports from CoinDesk state that the Solana Foundation has released a report titled “Privacy on Solana: A Holistic Approach for Modern Enterprises,” which suggests that enterprise adoption requires flexible privacy controls and positions privacy as a customizable feature rather than a trade-off. The report believes that the next phase of crypto adoption will depend more on controlling who can access and what information is disclosed, rather than solely relying on transparency. The Solana Foundation outlines four different privacy models: pseudonymization, confidentiality, anonymity, and full privacy systems. Pseudonymization hides identities while transaction data remains visible; confidentiality allows participants to be known but encrypts sensitive information; anonymity conceals participant identities while transaction data is visible; full privacy systems use technologies like zero-knowledge proofs and secure multi-party computation to hide both identities and transaction data. The report emphasizes that no single privacy model fits all scenarios, and enterprises can mix different tools based on their needs. It also notes that Solana’s high throughput and low latency enable advanced privacy technologies to operate at near-network speeds, making applications like encrypted order books or private credit risk calculations possible. Additionally, the Solana Foundation proposes mechanisms such as “audit keys,” allowing designated parties to decrypt transactions when necessary, enabling coexistence of privacy and regulation.