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After I muted the group, I actually felt more comfortable... Less of that anxiety about "Did I miss something big happening?" Recently, I've been seeing everyone talk about on-chain privacy and compliance boundaries. To put it simply, ordinary users shouldn't expect to be "completely invisible," nor should they deceive themselves into thinking "small transactions are nobody's concern." On-chain data is just sitting there; what can be hidden more are behavioral patterns, not magic cloaks.
Plus, with all the recent complaints about miner/validator income, MEV, and ordering, I've had a bit of an awakening: you think it's peer-to-peer, but there are actually many middlemen. When the queue order changes, both privacy and fairness get compromised. My current expectations are twofold: don't leave unnecessary records (like address reuse), and don't push back hard on compliance; avoid unnecessary trouble with bridges and new tricks. Having seen too many historical incidents, there's really no need to treat yourself as a lesson. That's all for now.