Monero is the private money layer. It is what you use when you do not want the world to see your transactions. It is fungible, untraceable, and non-custodial by design. For applications where financial privacy matters, where the relationship between payer and payee should remain between them, Monero is the tool.
ANNE applications that handle value respect this. Kuno uses Monero exclusively for pledges because crowdfunding should not expose backers or creators. The music platform will use Monero for artist compensation and larger tips because privacy matters in those transactions. Annecoin handles the high-frequency micropayments where speed and hypergraph integration take priority.
But there is more to discuss than just application integration.
Questions worth discussing
- How view keys work and when to share them
- What in-app Monero wallets require technically
- How to monitor incoming transactions without holding funds
- Whether WebAssembly wallets are ready for production use
- What privacy-preserving strategies matter most for different use cases
- How to think about the relationship between public and private transaction layers
- Where Monero fits alongside other privacy technologies
- What legal considerations arise from using or integrating Monero
- How to balance transparency and privacy in different application contexts
- What the Monero ecosystem looks like now and where it is headed
If you have experience with Monero, questions about how it works, or thoughts on where it fits, this is the place.
