From Data Exposure to Controllable Privacy: Lagrange Injects 'Sense of Proportion' into Web3
In the on-chain world, every transaction and every action is like 'running naked' in a glass house—addresses, balances, and interaction records are visible to everyone. However, Lagrange (#Lagrange ) believes that Web3 can have more 'sense of proportion'; zero-knowledge proof (ZK) technology allows you to enjoy the security of blockchain while maintaining privacy boundaries.
Their solution is not about 'hiding data', but about 'proving results'. For instance, in DeFi lending platforms, traditional models require public disclosure of collateral amounts and borrowing records; with Lagrange's ZK technology, you only need to prove 'my assets are sufficient to cover the repayment' without revealing specific numbers, allowing the platform to lend with confidence. Similarly, in on-chain games, your card attributes and skill levels can be stored encrypted, and the battle results can be validated through ZK proofs, preventing cheating while not exposing strategic details.
This 'privacy protection' can also extend to cross-chain scenarios. When you transfer assets from Ethereum to Solana, Lagrange's ZK proof will verify 'this asset truly exists', but will not disclose your transfer history or holdings. For privacy-conscious users, this is the experience Web3 should provide: security does not mean 'transparent to the point of no limits', and freedom should not come at the cost of 'running naked for convenience'.
$LA tokens serve as the 'ecological fuel' for all of this: developers need to pay LA to use ZK services, nodes generate proofs and earn $LA , and stakers can participate in governance and establish privacy rules through LA. @Lagrange Official interprets with technology: the popularization of Web3 lacks not speed, but a 'sense of security' that makes ordinary people willing to use it. #lagrange may be the key project that finally makes blockchain 'understand proportion'.