Recently, there's been talk about on-chain privacy. To put it simply, ordinary people shouldn't expect to be "completely invisible." The entry points you use, exchanges, RPC, wallet fingerprints, and even your own transfer habits—all combined—are quite recognizable... For those who want to stay compliant, don't panic. Compliance is more about "being able to explain clearly where the money came from and where it's going," not about broadcasting every step to the whole world.



Anyway, I have low expectations: privacy tools can block outsiders, but can't stop those who really want to investigate; compliance isn't a talisman either—rules change, and you have to adapt again. A couple of days ago, there was a mainnet upgrade/maintenance on a popular public chain, and people in the group were guessing whether the ecosystem would migrate. I think it doesn't really matter whether they migrate or not; what's important is: don’t treat "switching chains" as a button to whitewash or hide from trouble. Let's leave it at that for now, and watch how it develops.
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