The changes in the past two years are actually quite obvious. Once the EU's AI Act was introduced, the entire industry has been pushing for privacy-first solutions — this is no longer optional. At the same time, many consumer platforms have paid the price for data breaches, and enterprises are also starting to treat "encryption in use" as a standard feature. What is the deeper driving force behind this? The roadmap for technical teams now revolves around two key elements: one is the governance framework for LLMs, and the other is the traceability of data sources. These changes may seem scattered, but they all point in the same direction — security and trust are becoming the core competitive advantages of products.

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OffchainOraclevip
· 7h ago
No problem with that, prioritizing privacy is now a must; if not, the EU's crackdown will directly raise the industry's entry barriers. --- Data breaches... they've long deserved consequences, given how hardcore they were back then. --- I'm optimistic about traceability; on-chain data provenance can really solve many trust issues. --- The core competitiveness is shifting from functionality to security and trust; this trend is irreversible, and many projects will benefit from this wave of redirection. --- The LLM governance framework is still in the exploration stage, it seems standards haven't even been unified yet. --- I've been waiting a long time for encryption to become standard practice, and it's finally no longer just marketing talk.
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Blockwatcher9000vip
· 7h ago
As soon as regulation comes, everyone gets scared. It's really interesting. Privacy first isn't because of conscience, but because they're afraid of being fined.
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probably_nothing_anonvip
· 7h ago
Privacy-first is no longer just a gimmick; now it's truly being forced into the spotlight. Actually, that's pretty good.
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CommunityLurkervip
· 7h ago
The EU's move really hit the mark. Privacy-first has now become a matter of life and death rather than a bonus, and this shift is happening at an astonishing speed.
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0xDreamChaservip
· 8h ago
Really, once regulation steps in, the entire industry changes its flavor. Privacy-first has shifted from optional to mandatory—who's going to sit back and do nothing in this wave? --- Enterprise encryption has become standard, but honestly, it's just being forced. Those data leaks happen one after another, gotta do something. --- LOL governance framework, traceability... sounds professional, but at the end of the day, it's still a trust crisis in data. --- Security as a core competitiveness? That should have been basic all along. Why are we only realizing this now? --- The EU legislation move is effective, directly changing the global approach; other regions can only follow suit. --- Traceability is tough to handle. The longer the supply chain, the more issues arise. Who's responsible for auditing? --- Privacy-first sounds good, but in reality, it's just shifting cost pressures onto tech providers. Who will bear the costs? --- This shift might be a bit late. Why didn't we start guarding against it earlier? --- Core competitiveness is important, but how long can it last? What's the next hot trend?
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