Auditors don’t need to see everything they need proof that rules were followed.
That’s where Dusk Network introduces an interesting concept: selective disclosure receipts. These are cryptographically signed proofs showing that a transaction met all required conditions, without revealing sensitive details like amounts or counterparties. The receipts can be stored off-chain or shared only with authorized auditors, preserving privacy while maintaining accountability.
For institutions, this mirrors the paper-trail assurance they rely on, without exposing internal data to the public. Over the long term, mechanisms like this could become standard for regulated DeFi products that need both trust and confidentiality built into their core design.
How could selective disclosure receipts help bridge trust between traditional auditors and on-chain financial systems?

