Recently, the community has been arguing again about privacy coins and mixing coins, whether they count as "original sins," tearing apart as badly as night trading K-line charts. To put it plainly, ordinary users should not have illusions about on-chain privacy: technically, you can hide a little, but in reality, compliance red lines are just around the corner. Your wallet address isn't an ID card, but if someone really wants to track it, it's not as "invincible" as you think.



My own expectation is very simple: privacy is used to avoid being watched, not to evade responsibility. The necessary evidence should still be kept, I can optimize transaction paths down to the bone, but when I encounter obviously gray-area entries, I’d rather take a detour. By the way, I have a bad habit—whenever I see words like "absolutely safe/never traceable," I screenshot and save them... for future face-slapping. The market never rewards confidence, and regulation is the same.
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