Recently, I saw that a certain region is talking about increasing taxes and tightening compliance.


Immediately, a bunch of people in the group started to worry about deposits and withdrawals...
I actually think that for ordinary people, on-chain privacy shouldn't be expected to be like a "cloak of invisibility."
To put it simply, privacy is more like whispering gossip in a coffee shop:
The person next to you may not hear clearly, but you don't know if the shop has cameras installed or not.

Don't think of compliance boundaries as a straight line, but more like subway turnstiles:
Usually, you just swipe and pass, but when there's risk control, they ask you to stand aside and explain,
or even ask you to refresh/retry a few times before letting you through.
My two expectations are:
Don't do operations that you're embarrassed to write in the remarks;
If you want privacy, treat it as "reducing exposure" rather than "absolute security."
For now, this way, you can save quite a bit on fees and mental stress.
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