These days, watching everyone do tasks during airdrop season feels just like clocking in at a job, and the platforms keep throwing all kinds of anti-fraud measures, increasingly resembling "you need to prove you're a good person." Speaking of on-chain privacy, my current expectation is quite simple: don't expect complete anonymity, and don't fantasize that full compliance will cover your back. On the blockchain, shadows will always be left behind; compliance is just about drawing clearer boundaries — you walk within those boundaries, and you can feel more at ease, but that doesn't mean no one is watching your footprints.



I personally treat it as a public square: expose as little as possible, don't tie all your wallets together, and don't give out permissions randomly just for a few points. First, revoke permissions from those unknown contracts you previously authorized, so you're not caught off guard if something goes wrong someday.
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