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Lately, the more I look at the blockchain, the more I feel that privacy is like fog—it can't disappear just by turning on an "anonymous mode." Addresses are like constellations; as the tides rise and fall, they always leave some traces: transaction paths, interaction habits, even the time periods you usually use. To put it simply, what ordinary users can expect is to "reduce the probability of being easily linked by a quick search," rather than complete invisibility.
The compliance line is also quite delicate: sometimes it's not what you did, but who you interacted with and who they interacted with. Recently, some people have been complaining that the tagging system of on-chain data tools is lagging and might even mislead users. After reading that, I just want to sigh—since the tags aren't necessarily reliable, don't be too surprised if they're assigned incorrectly.
So my current expectation is quite simple: I live in a glass universe, so I try to leave as few fingerprints as possible, doing important things separately; if I really need to connect with the fiat world, don’t expect to be completely trace-free. If you ask me where the boundary is... I don’t know either, but I’ll just treat the risks as normal for now.