Dusk and Ethereum have taken two completely different paths in underlying financial modeling.



Ethereum uses "event-driven" — transactions occur → state changes → off-chain events (like KYC completion) as supplementary inputs. In this logic, compliance is checked retroactively, with the technical layer allowing transactions first, and legal accountability coming afterward.

Dusk, on the other hand, adopts a "state machine finance" model. Investor eligibility and compliance status become inherent attributes of the account itself. Whether you can transfer or participate in a transaction is not judged by external services but is hardcoded at the protocol level. Unqualified investors simply cannot initiate transactions — this is a strict constraint.

From a regulatory adaptation perspective, Dusk is indeed more compliant under the MiCA framework — compliance is a prerequisite for execution, not an audit result. But what’s the cost? Ecosystem scalability is directly locked down.

The core feature of DeFi is composability — your assets can seamlessly integrate with various other protocols. But Dusk’s state machine logic naturally rejects external calls that haven't been pre-approved. Imagine a DEX-style exchange whose trading logic lacks embedded investor verification; then XSC assets cannot be directly integrated — because the compliance rules of the two systems simply don’t match.

In plain terms, Dusk isn’t expanding Web3 finance; it’s building a parallel financial universe. This universe is safer and more compliant, no doubt, but also more closed.

For DeFi users who pursue openness, this is a step backward. For institutions seeking certainty, it’s still just an experiment.

The result is: Dusk trades ecosystem openness for institutional isolation. This path isn’t wrong, but it’s destined to be lonely. Its true value isn’t in replacing Ethereum but in proving that another financial computation paradigm is indeed feasible — even if that means sacrificing openness.
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wagmi_eventuallyvip
· 11h ago
Haha, this is the eternal contradiction between centralization and decentralization. Dusk has been pushed to the brink by regulation. --- To be honest, I can understand Dusk's approach, but it really looks too much like traditional financial services. Why do we even need blockchain then? --- Pre-approval compliance sounds safe, but a fragmented ecosystem is awkward. What’s the use of an isolated island? --- Rather than saying Dusk is innovating, it’s more like compromising. A chain tamed by MiCA—does it still count as a chain? --- Laughing to death, in the end, the institutions won. Ordinary users want freedom, but they only get safety and compliance. --- This logic is like stripping the soul from DeFi, leaving only a shell for regulatory authorities. --- Wait, so Dusk users can only interact with other Dusk users? Then this ecosystem can’t survive.
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MetaEggplantvip
· 11h ago
Compliance upfront vs. post-incident accountability, choosing either is a dead end... Dusk's move is too aggressive, directly cutting flexibility It's like putting a butler in DeFi, everything has to be approved first, losing composability—what's the point of talking about an ecosystem? Institutions are definitely eyeing this greedily, but are they really daring to use it? They're just testing the waters first Switching to compliance in a closed system, Dusk bets on the institutional market, but Web3 is inherently about openness—this is just self-imposed shackles Ultimately, it's a problem of two incompatible systems; XSC assets simply can't be compatible with other protocols, and that's the most painful part Dusk might become the answer in a certain niche, but replacing Ethereum? Don't even think about it
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LiquidityNinjavip
· 12h ago
Conformance locking combinations, this is probably Dusk's fate. Wanting to have both fish and bear paws is too naive. --- So Dusk is just a sandbox reserved for institutions? Isn't the soul of DeFi permissionless? --- Hard constraints sound safe, but isn't this just central but decentralized... a bit ironic. --- Closed and secure exchanges mean huge losses for retail investors. --- Wait, isn't this logic somehow returning to traditional finance? Just with a different blockchain skin. --- Dusk's story is actually—choosing regulatory friendliness and giving up the essence of Web3. --- Thinking about it this way, Ethereum's "post-incident accountability" model might actually be more in line with Web3 spirit. --- The lonely financial universe sounds okay, but the ecosystem can't grow big... no one to play with. --- XSC assets can't cross protocols... then is it even DeFi? Feels like the opposite of DeFi.
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