Recently, when looking at on-chain privacy issues, I feel everyone should set an expectation first: privacy is not invisibility, more like filtering the waveform; outsiders can't see the details clearly, but that doesn't mean someone can't reconstruct you by following the noise. The compliance boundaries are also quite realistic; exchanges and deposit/withdrawal channels are becoming stricter. If you really want to use privacy tools, it's best to treat them as "reducing exposure," not as a "get-out-of-jail-free card."



These days, I've been discussing whether testnet incentives and points can be exchanged for tokens, honestly, many people are chasing the illusion of "anonymous + airdrop"... I now just treat it as practice and observing on-chain behavior, don't randomly bind your identity or wallet; models can be backtested, emotions can't be backtested. First, keep your hands in check.
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