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Lately I've been thinking about on-chain privacy again. To be honest, ordinary people shouldn't expect to be "completely invisible." You don't write your name on your address, but by piecing together transaction paths, habits, and commonly used protocols, a profile can be built; the compliance side is also moving forward, and often it's not about catching you, but platforms/entry points setting the thresholds first. My expectations are twofold: first, assume you'll be seen, so don't put everything like your salary card on the chain; second, leave as few traces as possible, use layered addresses, and don't tie identity clues too tightly to your main wallet. The NFT royalty disputes are quite similar—if creators want stable income, they have to accept more rules; if you want smooth secondary liquidity, don't expect everyone to pay voluntarily out of "moral" conscience. (I'm treating "privacy" here as reducing friction, not as a shield.)