Recently, I saw a bunch of people rushing to test the network and doing interactions, claiming to focus on product experience, but secretly calculating whether the mainnet will issue tokens... I'm actually quite calm about it. Frankly, when it comes to on-chain privacy, ordinary users shouldn't have the expectation of "no one will know once I do it," because on-chain data is too transparent. If compliance checks are to be carried out, many times it's just about whether you're willing or have the cost to match the identity.



My own boundary is: expose as little as possible, but I don't treat privacy as a shield. Keep addresses dispersed, funds' paths not too obvious, more like making a "backup"—leave redundancy, leave a way out, so that if something happens, you can explain it clearly, and stay calm. Anyway, don't mess up your transaction records just for points expectations; in the end, the one who gets trapped first is often yourself. That's all for now.
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