The question isn’t whether privacy. It’s what sort of privacy
Blockchains are going private. The only question left is what kind of privacy the industry will build, argues Schiller.
The question of whether or not institutional chains will be private has been settled. What remains is the harder one: what kind of privacy are we actually building?
The problem with public chains
Bitcoin solved a problem that had stumped computer scientists and bankers for decades: how to transfer value between strangers without a trusted intermediary. Ethereum took blockchains further, offering programmable value alongside value transfer — smart contracts that could encode agreements, automate settlement, and eliminate entire categories of middlemen. Then came stablecoins, which married programmability to the stability of the dollar, and from there, the migration of real-world assets to onchain protocols began.
Each wave has brought added institutional interest, capital, and ambition. And now, as regulatory clarity emerges, institutions are ready to deploy resources onchain.
But there’s one thing holding them back — a fundamental flaw that becomes more consequential the larger the numbers get.
Everything is visible. Every wallet. Every balance. Every transaction, in real time, is readable by anyone with a browser. In financial markets, this is not a feature. It is an existential problem. Imagine if every hedge fund’s positions, every corporate treasury’s holdings, every pension fund’s rebalancing trade appeared on a public screen the moment it was executed. Sophisticated counterparties would front-run. Competitors would map your strategy. Criminals would identify targets. The financial system as it exists today would seize up overnight.
Blockchains have been asking institutions to accept exactly that. Tempo’s announcement on April 16 is the clearest possible signal that institutions have finally said: no.
Architecture is destiny
Here is where the conversation gets more consequential — and more nuanced.
Tempo’s solution is Zones: private parallel blockchains connected to the main network. Within a Zone, participants transact privately. The public sees only cryptographic proofs of validity, not underlying data. Compliance controls travel with the token automatically. Assets remain interoperable with Tempo Mainnet. For enterprises running payroll, treasury operations, or settlement workflows, it is a thoughtful and practical design.
