I just turned off the "Public Asset Display" switch in my wallet. It's not about hiding from anyone; it's more like suddenly realizing: on-chain privacy, to put it simply, is more about "exposing less," not "completely disappearing." Don't expect the boundaries of compliance to be too romantic; when it comes to tracing, transaction records, deposits and withdrawals, and that pile of information from CEXs, ordinary people will find it hard to be invisible.



Recently, I've been feeling a bit exhausted by social mining and fan tokens—this idea of "attention as mining." Of course, attention is valuable, but what’s really valuable is the traffic funnel for platforms and project teams, not that I can just click a couple of times to get a privacy amulet. Anyway, my own expectation is: leave fewer traces if possible, don’t recklessly sign authorizations on the chain, and for routing/slippage, you should still check. If you want to be compliant, don’t rely on "a sense of anonymity" to solve everything. That’s all for now.
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