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Lately, I've been looking into the boundaries of on-chain privacy and compliance, and the more I look, the more I think ordinary people shouldn't hold overly romantic expectations. To put it simply, on-chain isn't "stealth mode"; it's more about shifting traces from identity to behavior: your address isn't real-name verified, but transaction history, interaction paths, and timestamps are all there. If someone really wants to investigate, they can piece it back together bit by bit.
In fact, compliance isn't a one-size-fits-all; it's more like "don't treat others as air." Mixing coins and privacy tools can be used, but don't expect that using them automatically exempts you from responsibility; platforms and nodes also have their own risk controls, and suddenly blocking you isn't unusual. Anyway, my current approach is: expose as little as possible, but also don't gamble on "absolute safety."
By the way, looking at the economic collapse of blockchain games—when inflation kicks in, studios come in, and coin prices spiral—on-chain transparency actually accelerates panic spreading... Sometimes, the tug-of-war between privacy and compliance ultimately results in users taking the hit in the middle. That's all for now.