For a long time, we have lived in a glass city with no privacy. When you buy a cup of coffee or transfer some money, all your belongings are subjected to scrutiny by passersby with magnifying glasses. Retail investors feel embarrassed, and companies outright reject this kind of online exposure.
By the end of March this year, the new district @MidnightNetwork is about to open. It advocates a sense of rational distance: what should be public is public, and what should be confidential is confidential. It's like going to a bar; the security only needs to confirm that you are of legal age, without needing to take your household registration book and home address. Relying on zero-knowledge proofs and a dedicated Compact language, it turns minimal information exposure into common knowledge on this continent.
This is by no means a lone battle. Just look at the security lineup in the new district; traditional giants like Google Cloud, MoneyGram, and Worldpay have all joined in, transforming a geek utopia into a practically viable fortified base. Its pilot area, Midnight City, is already bustling, with countless AI residents interacting wildly, turning boring test sandboxes into a real carnival.
With the boost from the Binance #night prize pool, everyone finally understands that it is not merely patching the old system, but completely reshaping the rules. It has installed a cat-eye security door in this transparent world; the door can still be wide open, but from now on, it refuses anyone to rudely intrude into your private living room.
