Recently, I’ve seen people watching large on-chain transfers. The moment an exchange hot/cold wallet moves, they say, “Smart money is coming.” In plain terms, what you’re often seeing is just asset relocation, consolidation, risk-control rebalancing, or even a decoy—smoke meant to be put on for you. When it comes to on-chain privacy, ordinary users really shouldn’t have too many illusions: transfer records are inherently public. Not writing your name on an address doesn’t mean no one can link it back to you—especially once you’ve sent to or withdrawn from an exchange. Then that compliance line will follow you. What you can reasonably expect is this: don’t click random links, don’t sign authorization casually, revoke permissions after you’re done, diversify if you can, and don’t treat “privacy tools” like an invincible cloak—at the end of the day, you’ll just become a key focus target… Anyway, I’d rather deal with some hassle than have to explain myself for half an eternity afterward. I’m off to work.

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