The biggest problem of blockchain is not transparency, but rather over-exposure.
Earlier I used to think that privacy in crypto meant just hiding data, but after observing actual usage, I understood that the real game is to prove the truth without revealing sensitive details.
Just like showing a '18+' green tick instead of giving the whole ID card to a club bouncer, that is the magic of Zero-Knowledge Proofs (ZKP).
On existing chains, every transaction is an open book, which is risky for real-world businesses. Here, Midnight Network plays a foundational privacy layer role, balancing public and private data in the background.
The actual use of @MidnightNetwork in this ecosystem is to fuel this network to execute smart contracts and empower dApps that do not allow user data to leak on the public ledger.
The market always runs on short-term hype and attention cycles, but long-term value lies in actual developer activity and sustainable usage. Taking these complex ZKP systems to mass adoption is the biggest challenge. Real growth will only be verified when $Night and Midnight Network become a part of everyday workflows and real business operations instead of just being a narrative.

