A prominent crypto analyst has flagged the official launch of Midnight, a new blockchain positioned as a “fourth generation” network built around real-world privacy and compliance.
In a recent video, Linda a.k.a CryptoFly argues that while Bitcoin delivered digital money and Ethereum brought smart contracts, most high-value assets still can’t move on-chain because current systems are too transparent for regulated finance.
A Hybrid Privacy Model With Client-Side Zero-Knowledge
The core claim: Midnight is designed to let sensitive data stay off-chain while remaining verifiable on-chain. The network uses a hybrid model where public and private data coexist, so transactions and logic can be audited without exposing underlying identities or documents.
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According to Linda, Midnight relies heavily on client-side zero-knowledge proofs. “Your data stays on your device and only proofs get submitted on chain,” she explains. Moreover, that structure is pitched as a way to handle identity, compliance, and eligibility checks without revealing the actual data to the network or other users.
Developers can reportedly work with shielded and unshielded assets and use selective disclosure, turning privacy into an adjustable parameter rather than an all-or-nothing setting. The host frames this as “programmable, selective privacy” that could support use cases from finance to identity and data-sharing.
Dust, Nite & The Push For Real-World Adoption
Midnight’s token design separates governance and value from transaction costs. Nite functions as the primary token for governance and value transfer, while “Dust” powers transactions. Dust regenerates over time “kind of like a battery”, CryptoFly says, suggesting more predictable costs and even apps where end-users don’t need to hold any crypto.
On the developer side, Midnight introduces a TypeScript-based language called Compact, meant to abstract away much of the cryptography typically required to build privacy-preserving apps. The analyst presents this as a practical on-ramp for teams that want privacy features without becoming zero-knowledge specialists.
The launch is not fully decentralized from day one. The network is starting with a federated setup backed by major infrastructure partners including Google Cloud and MoneyGram, with a phased rollout where early apps operate in a controlled environment before the system opens up further.
A partnership with Monument Bank is cited as an early indicator that traditional finance might be willing to experiment with Midnight’s model.
For market watchers, the key question is whether this blend of programmable privacy, compliance tools, and predictable fees can finally draw regulated assets and identity data onto public infrastructure.
If it works as described, Midnight could push the broader market toward privacy that’s less about secrecy and more about controllable disclosure — a shift that may matter as regulators tighten expectations around on-chain transparency.
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It focuses on selective, programmable privacy with client-side zero-knowledge proofs and hybrid public/private data, rather than blanket anonymity.
The video suggests some apps may abstract away the need to hold crypto, since Dust for transactions regenerates over time and can potentially be managed by the application.
Not exactly. It starts in a federated configuration with infrastructure partners, with plans to move toward greater decentralization over time.
Linda a.k.a CryptoFly mentions Google Cloud, MoneyGram, and Monument Bank as early ecosystem participants or partners.

