Aleo Joins the Global Dollar Network to Bolster Stablecoin Payments Privacy

Earlier this week, Aleo’s non-profit Foundation announced that it had joined the Paxos-backed Global Dollar Network (GDN), an ecosystem built around USDG, a fully regulated U.S. dollar stablecoin issued by Paxos and backed by major partners including Anchorage Digital, Kraken, Mastercard, Paxos, Robinhood, Worldpay, and others.

The Aleo Foundation plans on using USDG for on-chain treasury management and vendor payments, all while leveraging its native blockchain’s privacy-preservation setup (enabling the processing of stablecoin transactions in a fully encrypted manner).

Not only that, as the first L1 to join the GDN, Aleo will incorporate its zero-knowledge (zK) and private smart contract capabilities into the latter’s ecosystem, which already spans established networks like Solana, Ethereum, and even newcomers like Ink. On the development, BJ Mahal, head of partnerships at The Aleo Foundation, opined:

“Aleo’s mission is putting programmable privacy at the center of blockchain innovation, and joining Global Dollar Network is both a recognition of Aleo’s unique technology stack and an opportunity to shape tomorrow’s financial systems.”

Making privacy-first stablecoins the new normal

Hailed as a privacy-first blockchain for programmable payments, Aleo ensures that transaction details (such as who paid whom and how much) stay confidential at all times. This is crucial because, on today’s public blockchains, every stablecoin transfer can be viewed openly, resulting in something as mundane as buying a coffee inadvertently leaving a public record of an individual’s finances, salaries, and even spending history.

In fact, it is this very facet that has become an impediment to widespread enterprise stablecoin adoption, with industry experts warning that companies can and will never be onboard to pay suppliers with stablecoins because it could mean revealing their price negotiations, payment structures, etc.

Zero-knowledge proofs (ZKP) on Aleo fix this glaring hole, allowing transactions to be validated by smart contracts without ever exposing sensitive details. In practice, Aleo’s confidential payment apps can verify things like KYC/AML without publishing payer identities or amounts, meaning that businesses can run payrolls or vendor payments on-chain privately, keeping exact salaries or supplier deals hidden from rivals and public view.

Similarly, the Global Dollar Network too has built itself around a similar ethos by making use of the regulated USDG stablecoin. The latter is fully compliant with MiCA and is therefore available for use in the EU, opening access for hundreds of millions of users in the region. Moreover, in a bid to accelerate its adoption, the GDN has established an ecosystem of over 20 partners (consisting not just of crypto exchanges like Kraken, but also payment giants such as Worldpay, and fintech leaders like Robinhood and Anchorage Digital).

In effect, companies using Aleo for stablecoin payments could transact in USDG the same way as before, except that transaction details stay hidden from public block explorers.

The numbers speak for themselves

A quick look at the market and one can see that the stablecoin sector has already transformed into a massive phenomenon, with its supply trove topping roughly $225 billion (as of Q1 2025) and on-chain transactions hitting $27.6 trillion late last year ( surpassing Visa and Mastercard’s annual volumes combined).

As expected, this explosive growth has put regulators on alert, with Europe recently introducing the new MiCA framework (Markets in Crypto-Assets), which imposes strict compliance rules on stablecoins. In the same vein, the United States has also moved toward oversight, with lawmakers currently in the process of drafting legislation to govern these digital assets.

In this broader context, Aleo’s entry into the Global Dollar Network comes at a crucial juncture, as it is helping stablecoins realize their true potential by offering built-in confidentiality (for both identity and amount). In other words, tying privacy and compliance together is helping stablecoins scale into the mainstream.

That said, for now, businesses and developers watching Aleo will be keen to see real-world use cases, be it cross-border payrolls, private supply-chain finance, or even confidential corporate settlements. Therefore, as stablecoins cement their place within the finance arena, Aleo’s privacy technology may prove to be a key piece that unlocks the next wave of on-chain payments. Interesting times ahead!

Earlier this week, Aleo’s non-profit Foundation announced that it had joined the Paxos-backed Global Dollar Network (GDN), an ecosystem built around USDG, a fully regulated U.S. dollar stablecoin issued by Paxos and backed by major partners including Anchorage Digital, Kraken, Mastercard, Paxos, Robinhood, Worldpay, and others.

The Aleo Foundation plans on using USDG for on-chain treasury management and vendor payments, all while leveraging its native blockchain’s privacy-preservation setup (enabling the processing of stablecoin transactions in a fully encrypted manner).

Not only that, as the first L1 to join the GDN, Aleo will incorporate its zero-knowledge (zK) and private smart contract capabilities into the latter’s ecosystem, which already spans established networks like Solana, Ethereum, and even newcomers like Ink. On the development, BJ Mahal, head of partnerships at The Aleo Foundation, opined:

“Aleo’s mission is putting programmable privacy at the center of blockchain innovation, and joining Global Dollar Network is both a recognition of Aleo’s unique technology stack and an opportunity to shape tomorrow’s financial systems.”

Making privacy-first stablecoins the new normal

Hailed as a privacy-first blockchain for programmable payments, Aleo ensures that transaction details (such as who paid whom and how much) stay confidential at all times. This is crucial because, on today’s public blockchains, every stablecoin transfer can be viewed openly, resulting in something as mundane as buying a coffee inadvertently leaving a public record of an individual’s finances, salaries, and even spending history.

In fact, it is this very facet that has become an impediment to widespread enterprise stablecoin adoption, with industry experts warning that companies can and will never be onboard to pay suppliers with stablecoins because it could mean revealing their price negotiations, payment structures, etc.

Zero-knowledge proofs (ZKP) on Aleo fix this glaring hole, allowing transactions to be validated by smart contracts without ever exposing sensitive details. In practice, Aleo’s confidential payment apps can verify things like KYC/AML without publishing payer identities or amounts, meaning that businesses can run payrolls or vendor payments on-chain privately, keeping exact salaries or supplier deals hidden from rivals and public view.

Similarly, the Global Dollar Network too has built itself around a similar ethos by making use of the regulated USDG stablecoin. The latter is fully compliant with MiCA and is therefore available for use in the EU, opening access for hundreds of millions of users in the region. Moreover, in a bid to accelerate its adoption, the GDN has established an ecosystem of over 20 partners (consisting not just of crypto exchanges like Kraken, but also payment giants such as Worldpay, and fintech leaders like Robinhood and Anchorage Digital).

In effect, companies using Aleo for stablecoin payments could transact in USDG the same way as before, except that transaction details stay hidden from public block explorers.

The numbers speak for themselves

A quick look at the market and one can see that the stablecoin sector has already transformed into a massive phenomenon, with its supply trove topping roughly $225 billion (as of Q1 2025) and on-chain transactions hitting $27.6 trillion late last year ( surpassing Visa and Mastercard’s annual volumes combined).

As expected, this explosive growth has put regulators on alert, with Europe recently introducing the new MiCA framework (Markets in Crypto-Assets), which imposes strict compliance rules on stablecoins. In the same vein, the United States has also moved toward oversight, with lawmakers currently in the process of drafting legislation to govern these digital assets.

In this broader context, Aleo’s entry into the Global Dollar Network comes at a crucial juncture, as it is helping stablecoins realize their true potential by offering built-in confidentiality (for both identity and amount). In other words, tying privacy and compliance together is helping stablecoins scale into the mainstream.

That said, for now, businesses and developers watching Aleo will be keen to see real-world use cases, be it cross-border payrolls, private supply-chain finance, or even confidential corporate settlements. Therefore, as stablecoins cement their place within the finance arena, Aleo’s privacy technology may prove to be a key piece that unlocks the next wave of on-chain payments. Interesting times ahead!

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