But Tempo’s privacy model is operator-visible. The Zone operator — an enterprise or infrastructure provider — sees all transactions within its Zone. The public sees nothing. The operator sees everything. For many regulated institutions, this is acceptable, and may even be required. But it means privacy is contingent on trusting an intermediary. You have moved the visibility problem; you have not eliminated it.

This is not a criticism of Tempo. It is a description of a genuine architectural choice — one with real consequences for anyone thinking carefully about risk.

Zero-knowledge cryptography offers a different path. ZK proofs allow a party to prove that a transaction is valid without revealing the underlying data. A new generation of ZK-native blockchains builds this privacy-preserving functionality into the execution layer itself. Accounts execute transactions locally, with the chain storing only a cryptographic commitment. Nothing sensitive ever touches a public ledger. Transaction history is not browsable. And crucially, no operator has a god’s-eye view — privacy is enforced at the base layer, not delegated to an intermediary.

If Bitcoin gave us trustless transfer and Ethereum gave us programmable trust, ZK-native blockchains offer verifiable privacy: the ability to prove that everything happened correctly without revealing what actually happened.

Compliance without full transparency

The obvious objection is regulatory. Privacy and compliance have long been framed as incompatible — oil and water. That framing is becoming obsolete.

Regulatory compliance does not require that everyone can see your transactions. It requires that the right parties, under the right conditions, can verify that your transactions were legitimate. That is a meaningful distinction, and it is one that ZK cryptography is uniquely positioned to enforce. Selective, programmable disclosure — revealing what regulators need to see, nothing more — is not a workaround. It is a more precise implementation of what compliance actually demands.

Tempo’s model handles this at the operator level. ZK-native approaches handle it at the cryptographic level. Both satisfy the compliance requirement. But they distribute trust very differently.

The question that matters

The financial industry knows it needs to move onchain. It now knows — Tempo’s announcement makes this undeniable — that it cannot do so on fully public infrastructure. The era of public-by-default blockchains as the assumed standard for institutional finance is ending.

What comes next depends on a choice the industry is only beginning to make clearly: privacy through trusted operators, or privacy through cryptographic guarantees that require no trust at all.

Both are legitimate answers. But they are not equivalent. The privacy model you choose determines your risk surface, your compliance posture, and your exposure to the failure modes of the intermediaries you depend on. Architecture is not a technical detail to be resolved later. It is the decision that determines everything else.

The question for the industry is not whether privacy. That debate is over.

The question is what sort of privacy — and who, if anyone, you are willing to trust with the view.

Note: The views expressed in this column are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of CoinDesk, Inc. or its owners and affiliates.

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