bitcoin was right to reject programmability but wrong to reject privacy
If you told me 6 months ago that Zcash would start absorbing Bitcoinâs original use-case, Iâd have laughed.
Today, Iâm not so sure...
In fact, I believe a strong case can be made that BTC's original cypherpunk vision has been hijacked.
Not just because it has underperformed things like the $QQQ's, but because its role as a sovereign, censorship-resistant, private medium of wealth storage and transfer has been hollowed out...
For example,
~9% of all BTC sits in US ETFs or government treasuries today; custodial, surveilled, fully transparent structures where individual sovereignty is basically zero.
At the same time, global financial surveillance is accelerating.
From EU stablecoin balance caps, eventual roll outs of CBDCâs across a range of jurisdictions and the very real possibility of a more interventionist, anti crypto âdemocratic socialistâ US government.
What many no longer discuss is that Bitcoin actually had an opportunity to fix this over a decade ago...
The Zerocoin proposal, a cryptographically sound privacy layer designed specifically for Bitcoin, was brought to the community in 2013.
It could have become Bitcoinâs native shielded transaction system or at least a sidechain that preserved the assetâs cypherpunk roots.
But Bitcoin Core rejected it.
Not because it didnât work, but because the culture had already begun shifting toward âdonât change Bitcoin,â ossification, and risk-aversion.
The team behind Zerocoin eventually left and created Zcash, implementing the privacy Bitcoin refused to adopt.
Against that backdrop, Bitcoin has no credible way to shield balances or transaction flows.
Even Satoshi openly acknowledged this limitation in 2010: âIf a solution was found, a much better, easier, more convenient implementation of Bitcoin would be possible.â
He was talking specifically about privacy.
If you go back through Bitcointalk archives, itâs clear a lot of early Bitcoiners believed that if stronger cryptographic tools existed then, Bitcoin wouldâve implemented them from day one.
That sentiment never fully went away, and as modern ZK proving systems have matured, itâs resurfaced in a very real way.
This is (IMO) one of the biggest drivers behind ZECâs recent outperformance today.
But why ZEC then and not $XMR?
Monero is obfuscation, not encryption; so it is weaker from a technical POV.
Further, XMR's branding as a âdarknet coinâ permanently limits its mainstream legitimacy. Zcash, on the other hand, has consciously rebranded itself around freedom, sovereignty, and cryptographic integrity, not as the preferred currency of criminals...
/////
The larger, more recent and timely unlock for ZEC though, is less around its branding but more around recent advances in UX.
Last month, NEAR Intents fully integrated ZEC, rolling out Zashi Swaps.
This has helped enable native, shielded, cross-chain swaps directly onchain and on mobile (without having to use a CEX).This is the infrastructure ZEC never had.
And since its gone live, the market has reacted.
$ZEC has already gone from ~$78 to a peak of ~$800 before settling in the ~$500 range today, and on Near Intents itâs now out-voluming Bitcoin:
30D: $390M ZEC vs. $272M BTC
7D: $168M ZEC vs. $94M BTC
These flows tell a very clear story: since its become trivial for users to rotate their BTC into ZEC in a fully non-custodial, private way, they've begun doing it.
You can also see this playing out directly on-chain.
Since October 1st, nearly 1 million ZEC (+25%) has moved into shielded pools, almost all of it driven by a vertical explosion in the Orchard pool once intents + mobile UX went live.
Nearly 5M ZEC is now sitting in shielded pools.
Another important point: the Winklevoss twins have publicly thrown their support behind ZEC.
While it may be easy to write them off as low signal these days, them throwing their weight behind a new token is very significant.
People forget how instrumental they were to Bitcoinâs early breakout, they:
- were among the first major BTC whales (held ~1% of supply)
- helped shape the macro narrative in 2013
- provided early liquidity pipelines
- and they helped legitimize Bitcoin to institutions at a time when nobody else could.
In this sense, their backing isnât symbolic but also signals to a very specific class of early adopters that ZEC is worth paying attention to.
Their alignment with the Trump administration also adds a non-trivial political dimension...
And itâs not just them. An increasing number of early BTC whales, have started to acknowledge that ZEC is picking up the values Bitcoin has slowly drifted away from.
You can feel that shift in tone if you track whoâs resurfacing in the conversation
Finally, ZEC has also stood out because itâs been one of the only PvE assets since the October upgrade went live, not PvP like the rest of the space has felt.
Where most of crypto has been existing participants trading against each other (plus some ETF- and DAT-specific flows), ZEC has actually pulled in new capital:
- BTC holders rotating for privacy reasons
- off-chain capital looking for sovereignty guarantees
- and even Silicon Valley technologists who still believe in and want exposure to the original cypherpunk ethos.
When you put all of this together:
- institutional/government capture of BTC
- rising global surveillance
- Satoshiâs own comments about Bitcoinâs missing privacy layer
- Bitcoin coreâs refusal to adopt Zerocoin or any credible privacy upgrade (forcing its creators to build Zcash instead)
- OG Bitcoiners revisiting the âwhat Bitcoin should have beenâ argument
- ZECâs technical superiority over XMR
- the Zashi/Intents UX unlock
- volume flipping BTC
- shielded supply going parabolic
- major early Bitcoin figures (Winklevoss + others) now supporting ZEC
- ZEC being one of the few PvE assets this cycle
âŠit becomes difficult to ignore the possibility that $ZEC is stepping into the role Bitcoin abandoned, a store of value with privacy and sovereignty built in.




2.12K
12
The content on this page is provided by third parties. Unless otherwise stated, OKX is not the author of the cited article(s) and does not claim any copyright in the materials. The content is provided for informational purposes only and does not represent the views of OKX. It is not intended to be an endorsement of any kind and should not be considered investment advice or a solicitation to buy or sell digital assets. To the extent generative AI is utilized to provide summaries or other information, such AI generated content may be inaccurate or inconsistent. Please read the linked article for more details and information. OKX is not responsible for content hosted on third party sites. Digital asset holdings, including stablecoins and NFTs, involve a high degree of risk and can fluctuate greatly. You should carefully consider whether trading or holding digital assets is suitable for you in light of your financial condition.


