방금 FOGO 트레이더 카드를 발급받았습니다.
등급: FOGO Explorer | 거래량: $0
FOGO는 DeFi에서 가장 빠른 체인입니다. 가장 빠른 실행 속도, 가장 낮은 수수료.
상위 트레이더를 위한 500,000 $FOGO 상금 풀이 있습니다.
내 순위를 넘을 수 있나요? #FogoKorea
1/
A global bank wants to tokenize corporate bonds.
But they have a problem.
They need privacy, regulatory control, and auditability —
without disconnecting from Ethereum liquidity.
This is where Prividium becomes the Bank Stack.
@zksync
2/
The bank runs an internal settlement network:
Client positions
Trade matching
Compliance checks
All of this must stay private.
Public L1s alone don’t work.
So they deploy a private ZK chain via Prividium.
3/
Inside Prividium:
Transactions are private
Validators are permissioned
Compliance rules are enforced at protocol level
It feels like TradFi infrastructure —
but it’s powered by ZKsync tech.
4/
Here’s the key part
The private chain anchors state and proofs to Ethereum.
Not positions. Not identities.
Only cryptographic guarantees.
Privacy is preserved.
Finality is public.
5/
Now the bank can:
Issue compliant onchain bonds
Settle internally at high speed
Tap public Ethereum liquidity when needed
Private where it must be.
Interoperable where it matters.
6/
This is the Bank Stack.
Not “banks using DeFi.”
But banks running their own ZK infrastructure,
natively connected to Ethereum.
That’s what Prividium + @zksync unlocks.
Institutions want to build on Ethereum and leverage its incorruptibility, hard finality, and global liquidity.
But many financial use-cases can’t be run on a chain where everything is public by default.
Here’s how Prividium extends Ethereum for enterprises:
So here’s what Prividium actually is — in plain words.
“Introducing Prividium”
official announcement from @zksync
Prividium isn’t a consumer app.
It’s not DeFi.
It’s not for retail.
It’s institutional blockchain infrastructure.
Prividium lets banks and enterprises run their own private, permissioned blockchains, where:
transactions stay private
data never leaks publicly
rules and policies are enforced at the protocol level
But here’s the key part.
Those private chains anchor to Ethereum using zero-knowledge proofs.
That means institutions get:
Ethereum-grade security & finality
without exposing sensitive data
without giving up control
without breaking compliance requirements
Old private blockchains were isolated silos.
Public blockchains are transparent by default.
Enterprises hate both extremes.
Prividium sits in the middle:
private when you need it, connected when it matters.
Privacy → ZK proofs
Compliance → permissioned execution + policy enforcement
Control → institutions own the chain
Connectivity → cryptographic settlement on Ethereum
This is why Prividium matters for Web3 adoption.
It’s not trying to onboard users.
It’s trying to onboard institutions — the capital, workflows, and systems that actually move markets.
If Web3 is going to support real-world finance,
this is the kind of infrastructure it needs.
Worth digging into Prividium and what @zksync is building here.
Feels less like hype — more like the bank stack quietly loading.
Institutions want to build on Ethereum and leverage its incorruptibility, hard finality, and global liquidity.
But many financial use-cases can’t be run on a chain where everything is public by default.
Here’s how Prividium extends Ethereum for enterprises:
This launch feels like a real turning point.
What @oncreator_ is unlocking with Creator Chain isn’t just “streaming onchain,” it’s a shift in how creators exist online. Avatars stop being skins you rent from a platform and start becoming persistent identity — tied to ownership, community, and onchain engagement.
ZTX Live makes that idea tangible. Your avatar, your stream, your audience, and the value flowing between them all live in the same system. No silent algorithm changes, no platform resets.
This is what a creator-native internet is supposed to look like.
Not more tools, but more control — in the hands of creators.
🔥 It’s official. The ZTX Streaming Platform powered by @oncreator_ on @zksync is LIVE! 🎉
Streaming just went onchain — and you don’t want to miss this.
A thread 🧵
https://t.co/ypEyjCXZhp
The L1 renaissance stops being a thesis when product UX starts breaking.
Scenium is a clear example of where that line gets crossed.
Scenium is building a social-first Web3 platform where identity, interactions, and community state live directly in the user flow. On-chain actions aren’t background settlement. They are the experience. Posts, reactions, and community actions all depend on timely, ordered execution.
That design immediately exposes the limits of shared rollup blockspace.
In a shared execution environment, Scenium’s user actions would compete with unrelated demand. A congestion spike elsewhere becomes delayed interactions, fluctuating fees, or reordered state. For DeFi, that’s often tolerated. For social products, it’s destructive. Users don’t analyze latency charts. They feel inconsistency and disengage.
This is the “noisy neighbor” problem in its most human-facing form.
Social platforms have a distinct execution profile:
high-frequency, low-value transactions
strong expectations around interaction order
UX that depends on predictable state transitions
Shared rollups optimize for aggregated throughput and cost efficiency, not interaction guarantees. When every click competes with unrelated activity, execution uncertainty becomes structural rather than incidental.
That’s why Scenium is launching as a sovereign L1 inside EcoCity.
By operating within EcoCity, Scenium gets dedicated blockspace while remaining part of a live, discoverable ecosystem of purpose-built L1s. This isn’t a standalone chain built in isolation. It’s a sovereign execution environment deployed where users can immediately interact with it.
Dedicated blockspace changes the product equation. Scenium controls sequencing so interactions resolve in the order users expect. Fees remain stable enough to disappear from the UX. Execution behavior aligns with product logic instead of forcing product compromises around external congestion.
What makes this shift notable is how fast it’s shipped.
Historically, choosing sovereignty meant months of infrastructure overhead: validator coordination, RPCs, upgrades, monitoring, and governance before a single user interaction. That burden pushed many teams into shared environments even when the fit was poor.
Orchestration via @TanssiNetwork collapses that overhead. Infrastructure complexity is abstracted without removing control. Scenium doesn’t need to become an infrastructure company to own its execution guarantees. Sovereignty becomes a deployment decision, not an organizational rewrite.
EcoCity makes this visible through live systems rather than narratives. Users don’t read about why sovereignty matters. They experience consistent execution and responsive interactions.
Scenium shows where shared rollup blockspace stops scaling — not in throughput benchmarks, but in products where execution is the experience.
At that point, owning your own blockspace isn’t a power move.
It’s a prerequisite.
With CRTR LAUNCH coming up, I found myself spending some time on
@oncreator_ ’s website, and it genuinely got me excited.
What stands out about Creator Chain is how clear the focus is.
It’s not just another chain or another token — it’s infrastructure built so creators can actually own their content, their data, and the value they create, without relying on platforms sitting in the middle.
The website feels product-first. No overhyped promises, just a clear direction of what they’re building and why it matters.
Creators can build, grow communities, and get rewarded for real engagement, not algorithms.
With the $CRTR token launch around the corner, this feels less like a hype moment and more like a natural next step for an ecosystem that’s taking shape.
If you believe the creator economy needs its own foundation, Creator Chain is definitely worth watching right now.
Everyone says it’s late, but creators aren’t competing yet.
@RallyOnChain still has empty markets and zero saturation.
This is builders phase, not payoff season.
I argued online for free anyway.
https://t.co/XwhrIxLD5Y turns arguments into USDC backed debate markets.
Same opinions, real stakes.
Just a fun experiment, not financial advice.
> https://t.co/LPEAZMTJwc