🅰️ What Is Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT)?

A Distributed Ledger is a decentralized database spread across multiple participants (nodes) in a network. Every node maintains a copy of the ledger, and updates are made through consensus.

🔹 Key Types:

  • Blockchain: The most famous DLT (used by Bitcoin, Ethereum).
  • DAG (Directed Acyclic Graph): Used by IOTA and others for faster, feeless transactions.

🅱️ Why Privacy Matters in DLT?

In public DLTs like Bitcoin, transactions are transparent — everyone can see the sender, receiver, and amount (though pseudonymous). This becomes a problem for enterprises, governments, and privacy-conscious users.

Use cases that need confidentiality:

  • Medical records
  • Bank transactions
  • Government or enterprise supply chains

🅲️ Privacy-Preserving Techniques in DLT

Here’s a breakdown of popular methods to preserve privacy in DLT systems:

✅ 1. Zero-Knowledge Proofs (ZKPs)

Let one party prove to another that they know a value (like a password) without revealing the value itself.

Used in:

  • Zcash (zk-SNARKs)
  • Polygon zkEVM
  • Aztec Protocol

✅ 2. Ring Signatures

Used in Monero — mixes a user’s transaction with others’ to obscure sender identity.

✅ 3. Stealth Addresses

Each transaction generates a one-time-use address for privacy (also used in Monero).

✅ 4. Confidential Transactions

Hide the transaction amount while still allowing network verification (used in Elements, Bitcoin test networks).

✅ 5. MPC (Multi-Party Computation)

Multiple parties jointly compute a function over their inputs while keeping them private.


🅳️ What is PADL? (Private, Auditable, Distributed Ledger)

Recently, researchers proposed a system called PADL — it aims to balance privacy, auditability, and decentralization.

🔑 PADL Features:

  • Private: Transactions are encrypted, only visible to involved parties.
  • Auditable: Selective disclosure possible — regulators can audit with permission.
  • Distributed: Operates like traditional DLTs with no single point of failure.
  • Multi-Asset: Can support various assets (currencies, tokens, securities).

Think of it as a privacy-enhanced blockchain for real-world finance.


🅴 Real-World Applications

🏦 1. Banking & Finance

  • Privacy-preserving payment systems
  • Digital currencies (like CBDCs – Central Bank Digital Currencies)
  • Confidential corporate transactions

📦 2. Supply Chain

  • Share critical data between vendors without leaking pricing or identity

🏥 3. Healthcare

  • Patients control who sees their records, while hospitals can verify authenticity

🅵 Technologies Enabling Privacy in DLTs

  • zk-SNARKs / zk-STARKs: Cryptographic proofs without revealing data
  • Homomorphic Encryption: Enables calculations on encrypted data
  • Bulletproofs: Shorter ZKP for Confidential Transactions
  • Trusted Execution Environments (TEEs): Hardware-based security (e.g., Intel SGX)

The Future of Privacy and DLT

🌐 Trends:

  • Governments working on privacy-friendly CBDCs
  • Enterprises adopting private blockchains with audit trails
  • New L2s (Layer 2s) on Ethereum focusing on privacy + scalability

💡 Challenges:

  • High computation cost for ZKPs
  • Regulatory concerns (e.g., anti-money laundering)
  • UX hurdles — privacy often complicates user experience

🚀 Summary

TopicSummary
DLTA decentralized ledger system
Privacy in DLTNeeded to protect data and business confidentiality
PADLFramework combining privacy, auditability, and decentralization
TechniquesZKPs, Ring Signatures, Confidential Txns, etc.
Use CasesFinance, healthcare, supply chains
ChallengesCost, regulation, complexity

🏦 How Privacy + DLT Are Related to Banks

🔐 1. Privacy in Transactions

Banks handle sensitive financial data:

  • Customer transactions
  • Interbank transfers
  • Loan details
  • Wealth management portfolios

🔸 Banks must protect this data, especially with increasing privacy laws (e.g., GDPR, HIPAA). Distributed ledger systems like PADL allow encrypted or private transactions while still being verifiable — essential for:

  • Regulatory compliance (e.g., for auditors)
  • Client confidentiality (e.g., VIP or corporate clients)

🧾 2. Auditable and Compliant Ledgers

Banks need systems that are:

  • Immutable (no backdating or tampering)
  • Auditable (for internal and external regulators)
  • Private (data not publicly viewable)

🔹 A PADL-like system enables:

  • Real-time regulatory audit access with selective disclosure
  • Compliance with AML/KYC rules without leaking customer data
  • Internal risk reviews without breaching confidentiality

🌐 3. Cross-Border Settlements & Trade

In cross-border finance:

  • Swift is currently dominant
  • High fees, slow settlement times
  • Transparency concerns

🔸 Banks are now exploring DLT-based cross-border platforms that:

  • Offer privacy-preserving real-time settlement
  • Reduce need for intermediaries
  • Keep records tamper-proof and auditable

Examples:

  • JPMorgan’s JPM Coin
  • HSBC’s FX Everywhere
  • Russia’s “China Track” netting system (DLT-based)

🪙 4. Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs)

Many central banks are designing CBDCs (like digital dollars, rupees, euros) on DLT, often with:

  • ZKPs or confidential transactions to protect user identity
  • Traceability for crime prevention
  • Control over interest rates or money supply

Banks will be the intermediaries between central banks and consumers in these systems.


🤖 5. AI + Private DLT for Smart Banking

Banks are integrating AI and smart contracts on private DLTs for:

  • Automated compliance
  • Personalized investment management
  • Smart lending decisions

These systems can run securely in privacy-preserving environments (e.g., TEEs + ZKPs), protecting both the customer and the bank.