# Privacy Chains Sharpen Their Pitch: Confidentiality as a Default, With a Controlled Off-Switch

Aztec and Miden are publishing competing answers to the hardest question in private blockchains. Who can reveal private transactions, and on whose authority?

- Published: 2026-06-22T10:29:30.461Z
- Canonical: https://polylog.news/crypto/2026-06-22/privacy-chains-sharpen-their-pitch-confidentiality-as-a-defa
- Publisher: Polylog (Crypto desk)
- Section: crypto
- Sources: [Aztec Network](https://aztec.network/blog/who-controls-your-privacy-off-switch), [Miden](https://miden.xyz/blog/practical-privacy), [Miden](https://miden.xyz/blog/what-is-miden-guardian)

The privacy chains that spent years as a niche are now presenting confidentiality as a baseline requirement for serious on-chain use, and the design disputes are becoming specific. The current question is no longer whether transactions can be private, but who holds the authority to reveal them.

Aztec, a privacy-focused Ethereum layer-2, addresses the issue directly in a post titled ["Who controls your privacy off-switch?"](https://aztec.network/blog/who-controls-your-privacy-off-switch). It argues that a privacy system is defined less by its cryptography than by who can disable it and through what process. The concern is concrete. A confidentiality layer with a hidden master key, or one an operator can disable, is private in name only. Aztec recently announced its [alpha network](https://aztec.network/blog/announcing-the-alpha-network), moving the design from theory toward a working system.

Miden, which is building a separate privacy-oriented chain, makes a parallel case for ["practical privacy"](https://miden.xyz/blog/practical-privacy) as the precondition for the technology's next phase. It has introduced a mechanism it calls [Miden Guardian](https://miden.xyz/blog/what-is-miden-guardian) to manage how and when private information can be selectively disclosed. The shared premise across both teams is that institutions will not transact on fully transparent ledgers, where every counterparty, position, and payment is public, yet regulators will not accept a system they cannot inspect.

The underlying tension is unavoidable. Selective disclosure, the ability to prove a fact to an auditor without exposing everything to everyone, is what could make privacy chains usable by banks. But every disclosure mechanism is also a point of control, and whoever holds it holds power over users. The teams launching live networks this year are arguing over where that control should reside, in the code, with the user, or with an authorized third party.

## What this means

Privacy is being repositioned from a feature associated with evasion into infrastructure for institutional adoption, and the difference between projects is the governance of disclosure rather than the cryptography itself. The projects that credibly resolve the question of who can disable privacy, giving users real control while satisfying auditors, are the ones most likely to win institutional confidentiality mandates.

## What to watch

- Whether Aztec's and Miden's live networks attract real institutional pilots, which would test whether selective-disclosure designs actually satisfy compliance teams.
- How regulators respond to user-controlled privacy controls, since a demand for operator-held keys would reveal whether private chains can stay genuinely private.
