Last night, while snacking and browsing on the blockchain, I kept thinking that we shouldn't have too high expectations for "privacy." Frankly, the blockchain isn't a safe deposit box; it's more like a glass house. All you can really do is leave fewer footprints and avoid linking your ID card with your wallet. The compliance boundaries are quite realistic: platforms need to investigate and perform risk control. Arguing with them is just exhausting. Use what you can, switch if you can't, and don't expect to stay anonymous forever and always have free access.



Recently, during the airdrop season, many task platforms are anti-witchcraft, and the point system makes earning tokens feel like clocking in at work... It's basically forcing you to share more "behavior data." My current patchwork approach: layer my wallets, avoid reckless authorization during interactions, record what I’ve done, and make small fixes when needed—don't turn yourself into an invisible person. Anyway, if I can't understand the narrative, I won't follow it; better to miss out.
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