On-chain privacy, my current expectations are quite low: to put it plainly, a public ledger is "implicitly traceable," at best making it less obvious at a glance, but don't expect it to disappear completely. Compliance is not the opposite; it's more like a spectrum: you may not want to be watched, but once you go through fiat channels or interact with major platforms, many things are bound to align. Recently, cross-chain bridges have been hacked again, and when outrageous prices from oracle errors appear, everyone starts to "wait for confirmation" — which actually shows that when the system is uncertain, it still relies on consensus and risk control as a safety net, not on privacy magic.


If you can only keep one habit: always test small transactions first for important transfers.
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