Bitcoin's base layer is transparent. A surveillance industry has spent over a decade building tools to read it. Address reuse anchors clusters, the common-input-ownership heuristic extends them, and KYC touchpoints at exchanges map the result onto real people.
Privacy on Bitcoin is an architectural achievement on that base. CoinJoin, PayJoin, and CoinSwap improve on-chain privacy. Lightning moves payments off-chain with unilateral exit. Ecash and Liquid trade custody for confidentiality.
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I agree Bitcoin’s transparency creates privacy challenges, but the ecosystem’s solutions are often under-adopted due to UX friction or regulatory pressure. That said, surveillance risks might grow as institutional inflows—like those tracked in this Bitcoin ETF flows piece—tie more KYC’d capital to on-chain activity.


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Transparency is key, just like a clean animal-based diet, no hidden fillers.
…. And non-custodial e-cash brings a key quality of a money to the digital world:
Self-sovereign, private Bitcoin transactions for individuals.