You think on-chain transactions are "first come, first served"? Honestly, many times it's "who can pay the priority fee to get ahead." With MEV and ordering, the worst off isn't the strategy developers, but ordinary users: clicking a swap expecting similar prices, only to get front-run, with slippage turning into an IQ tax; for liquidation, it's even more direct—being a second late means getting liquidated right in front of you. The so-called "fairness" ultimately turns into you and robots running on the same track, but they're riding motorcycles.



Recently, there's been a heated debate in the group about privacy coins and mixing compliance boundaries, almost like taking sides. But the reality is: the more you pursue "auditability," the easier it is for those who sort transactions to profile your behavior clearly; the more you pursue "privacy," the more you're labeled with a hat. Neither side is satisfying, but don't let emotions get the best of you. If you lose some, don't blame yourself so much that you can't sleep.

Today, let's do a small action first: review the authorizations of your commonly used wallets, revoke those you don't recognize or no longer use. Then go to sleep.
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