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Why do some say XMR might be the next big player to change the ecosystem? The key lies in its three privacy weapons.
**Ring Signatures — No one knows who transferred the money**
During a transfer, the system randomly pulls 10-16 historical user keys from the blockchain and mixes them with your key to generate a "ring signature." Validators can see that a transfer occurred, but they cannot determine which member of the ring actually made the transaction. Whether you send 1 million or just 1 dollar, the other party can only guess that the money came from someone in the ring — but who exactly? Sorry, that information is confidential.
**Stealth Addresses — Each transaction uses a new disguise**
The recipient can generate a completely new one-time address for each transfer, which has no public link to their real wallet account. As a result, third parties cannot deduce the recipient's identity from the address, nor can they track multiple transactions from the same person — because on the surface, it looks like different people are receiving the funds.
**Confidential Transactions — Amounts are fully encrypted**
The transfer amounts are encrypted on the blockchain, so no one can see the specific figures. A large transfer of 1 million and a small transfer of 1 dollar look identical on the chain — no one can infer the size of the funds based on the amount.
With this combination, XMR's privacy technology barrier is indeed quite deep. Of course, the market may face short-term corrections, which is normal.