
The Solana Foundation has introduced a new privacy framework aimed at institutional users, arguing that the next phase of crypto adoption will depend on flexible control over data disclosure.
In a report released Monday, the organisation said enterprises require more than transparency, outlining a system that allows companies to decide what information is shared and with whom.
“For enterprises, privacy is a spectrum, not a switch,”
Said the Solana Foundation in the report.
The framework presents four privacy modes—pseudonymity, confidentiality, anonymity and fully private systems—each offering different levels of identity and transaction data protection.
Solana said its high-speed network enables advanced technologies such as zero-knowledge proofs and multiparty computation to operate efficiently while still supporting regulatory compliance.
The report also highlights features such as auditor keys and compliance proofs, which allow transactions to be verified or decrypted by authorised parties without exposing sensitive data broadly.
The initiative reflects a broader shift in blockchain design, moving from fully transparent systems towards configurable privacy models better suited to financial institutions and regulated enterprise use cases.
At the time of reporting, Solana price was $90.33.