Recently, we've been discussing the boundaries of on-chain privacy and compliance. To put it simply, my expectations for ordinary users are twofold: don't treat "anonymity" as a stealth cloak, and don't think of "compliance" as something that will knock on your door immediately. On the blockchain, this stuff is more like a glass house—no one is watching you most of the time, but once something happens and you need to trace, the traces are all there.



I didn't expect hardware wallets to be out of stock... plus, with phishing links flying everywhere lately, privacy wasn't achieved, and I ended up sending assets to someone else—pretty awkward. My approach is like patching myself: keep rarely used addresses less exposed, manually verify all links, clear authorizations after a while, fix small issues to shore up the basics—don't expect to get everything perfect in one go. Anyway, the more emotional people get, the more they should stay calm.
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