Privacy Is Crypto’s Only Shot at Survival
The more I study the space, one question keeps coming back:
"What needs to happen for crypto to stay relevant in the next decade? "
Every path of reasoning leads me to the same answer, programable privacy.
This post is my attempt to explain why privacy will soon become the center of gravity for all serious crypto narratives, and why everything else depends on getting it right.
I'm going to break down my full thesis:
• Transparency was a fatal flaw, not a feature.
• Why privacy matters more than ever
• The incentives are lined up for privacy to dominate.
• Why it won't be easy, and that's a good thing
• And why every day we wait, the need only grows
Let's dive in.
1. Transparency Was Never the Feature
Bitcoin was the first blockchain to reach escape velocity.
It battled, survived, ossified…
Its greatest gift? The Lindy effect: survival through time and the trust that stability brings.
That slowness and lack of adaptability was also a flaw for new use cases
Ethereum saw an opportunity for innovation.
Smart contracts unlocked a 0 to 1 leap, a new coordination tool for a broader set of users and ideas.
But it came with a hidden fatal assumption:
"To coordinate humanity, you need an open, accessible, fully transparent ledger."
Transparency was celebrated as a feature, when in fact it was a silent bug.
Privacy builders saw the contradiction and they understood the deeper truth:
"Coordination without privacy is coordination without freedom."
Zero-knowledge proofs gave them the tools,
they opened the door to a different path, one that only now feels obvious in hindsight:
You don’t need to expose everything to build trust.
You can verify, without revealing.
Takeaway:
Crypto without privacy is a system designed to fail under real pressure.
2. Why Privacy Actually Matters
Privacy isn’t black and white. It’s a spectrum of choices.
You will tell a stranger your name, sure.
But would you show them your entire banking history, your home address, the places you visit every day? Probably not.
Privacy is not about hiding everything, it is about having the power to choose what stays private, and when.
Today, crypto gives you no choice.
Everything is public, always. And yet we call this "freedom."
Calling it crypto without privacy is already a contradiction.
Takeaway:
Privacy is not about secrecy. It’s about sovereignty.
3. Why the Incentives Are Now Aligned for a Privacy Boom
Forget the ideals for a second
let’s talk about what actually moves the world: money.
Imagine you run a fund managing billions in crypto. You hire 100 brilliant researchers to find the next unicorn. You spend millions crafting profitable strategies no one else sees.
But if your trades happen on-chain, everyone can watch you in real time.
They can front-run you, copy you, kill your edge. You lose before you even begin.
And it’s not just the funds.
→Small businesses want to pay salaries without exposing them.
→Individuals want to manage their finances without broadcasting them.
→DAOs and treasuries want to move capital without leaking their strategies.
Privacy solves real, painful problems, and a lot of them are tied directly to money.
After the early days of DeFi, we stopped building painkillers.
We started building funny gambling vitamins.
But in markets, painkillers always win.
Right now, there’s a trillion-dollar industry waiting to be claimed.
And trust me, when there’s gold lying on the floor, someone will pick it up.
Here's the crazy part:
Today, the total market cap of privacy tokens is only 9 billion dollars.
That's less than 0.3% of the entire crypto space.
Privacy is massively underpriced and the smartest money will not miss it for long.
Takeaway:
Privacy is not a "nice to have." It’s a trillion-dollar survival tool.
4. Why It’s Hard, and Why That’s Good for You
Is privacy in crypto guaranteed to win?
No.
It’s hard.
Zero Knowledge proofs aren’t easy math. Building usable privacy tools is brain-melting work.
But there are good news for you. You didn’t have to wait 10 years for blockchain research to mature.
You can "Skip Intro", like Netflix, and jump right to the good part.
Real privacy applications are finally landing.
Sure, privacy tech risks getting banned or censored.
Napster. Silk Road. Wikileaks.
History is full of cases where freedom-boosting technologies clashed with regulation.
And we're seeing it again:
→ Tornado Cash devs are still not free. Some cases are being revisited, but decriminalization hasn’t happened yet.
However, we are seeing the United States slowly getting on the road toward it, signaling a shift toward a more open and pragmatic stance on privacy.
Meanwhile, Europe’s MiCA law is moving in the opposite direction. Europe has decided its path, one that prioritizes control over freedom. And it will soon become a real-world case study of how limited crypto adoption can be when privacy is stripped away.
But here’s the thing:
I would never short a technology that directly expands human freedom.
Ever.
Technologies that make people more free (faster, cheaper, and globally) always find Product Market Fit.
Privacy isn’t a luxury, it is a primal need.
And nothing drives adoption like survival instincts.
The bet is simple:
Stand against privacy, and you stand against human nature.
Takeaway:
Privacy tech will grow so fast that even governments will be forced to adapt at some point.
5. The Clock is Ticking
Every day, surveillance technology gets smarter.
AI systems learn how to manipulate your fears, your desires, your choices.
We still laugh about it, it still feels harmless.
It’s early.
But tomorrow?
Control will not look like guns and police. It will look like apps, notifications and memes.
When that future arrives, you’ll either have tools to defend yourself... or you’ll be defenseless.
Privacy builders are the ones fighting to make sure we have a choice.
I’d love to be wrong about how bad it could get.
But I’m not betting on it.
And neither should you.
"Better to be a warrior in a garden than a gardener in a war."
Takeaway:
Tomorrow's freedom is decided by what we decide to build today.
Final Reflection
When I joined crypto in 2021, it felt alive. Geniuses everywhere. Builders with fire in their eyes.
But over time, that magic faded. The quick-flippers drowned out the builders. The grifters took over. It stopped being about building the future. It became about quick money, empty promises, and cash grabs.
Crypto started feeling rotten. Even I could barely care anymore.
Until I found the privacy people.
In the privacy world, the excellence is still alive.
Developers, marketers, lawyers, researchers… all grinders. All top-tier.
You can feel it in the air, the spirit that made crypto unstoppable is still breathing inside the privacy movement.
One day, when privacy reaches escape velocity, the small, electric, and cozy community we feel today will be gone.
Replaced by the masses.
It will be bittersweet.
But it will mean that it all made sense.
And it will mean that freedom got a second chance.
To the frontlines. History will remember who showed up 🫡
GODSPEED.