@0xPolygon partnerships with Meta, Visa, and Modern Treasury were followed by one key integration:
Hinkal for private stablecoin payments
Inside the Polygon wallet.
For Polygon’s institutional clients, privacy remains the primary blocker. Hinkal is the protocol solving this gap.
Details 👇
Confidential stablecoin custody is coming to The Vault.
Through Hinkal SDK, @thevault_soft is bringing private stablecoin transactions directly into its institutional custody platform.
The product experience stays the same, while privacy is added underneath.
Clients can deposit, send, withdraw, and settle stablecoins without revealing balances, payment amounts, counterparties, or transaction paths on-chain.
This enables enterprises to operate in stablecoins without exposing sensitive financial activity to competitors, counterparties, or the public, while selective disclosure remains available for regulators, auditors, and approved parties.
Same wallet keys, same compliance controls, no custody migration.
Privacy, built into your stack. Powered by Hinkal.
A zero-knowledge proof can keep a transaction private. But a proof needs something to prove.
What it proves depends entirely on how the private state is structured. That structure is what lets value be held, sent, and received in private, party to party, not just shielded on and off a public chain.
How We Built The Best Privacy Protocol On The Market
Signature series,
Episode 03: UTXO Model, Commitments & Nullifiers
With Giorgi Kvaratskhelia (@georgekvara3)
Thread ↓
This is what turns a privacy guarantee into a working financial record. Everything still ahead in the series operates on top of it.
A note proves what value is and who controls it, and it can move privately from one party to the next. What it does not yet cover is how a recipient is paid without exposing a reusable public identity.
Next in the Series:
Episode 04: Stealth Addresses.