Lately, discussions about on-chain privacy have become quite heated again. My own expectations are actually quite "conservative": on-chain isn't a stealth cloak, more like transparent glass with a frosted film applied—able to block a quick glance to recognize someone, but if you really want to trace, you can still piece it together. The compliance boundaries are roughly the same; ordinary users shouldn't expect "using a certain tool makes me inherently safe/inherently legal." At most, it just makes the granularity of exposed information coarser.



Airdrop season makes everyone feel like clocking in at work; task platforms are becoming increasingly strict against witch-hunting. With a points system in place, privacy becomes even more awkward: the more you want to prove "I'm a normal user," the more behavioral traces you have to reveal. Frankly, I only have two requests now: don’t expect to erase traces that should be left, and leave as few as possible that shouldn’t be. If you’re participating in activities, just walk in public—don’t do anything you’ll regret. Anyway, on-chain memory is too good... I don’t want to fight it.
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