Privacy coins are indeed an interesting sector. The price trend of XMR is quite mysterious—rising all the way, but few can truly explain the reasons. Some say it’s driven by demand from gray industries, but that’s just the surface.
In fact, this precisely illustrates a phenomenon: everything has both positive and negative sides. The same applies to crypto assets. Privacy protection itself is neutral; it can be used to safeguard legitimate rights and interests, but it can also be abused. Because of this opposition, it highlights the unique value of privacy coins—they meet the market’s genuine demand for transaction privacy.
Perhaps this is why privacy coins continue to attract attention. Not because they are entirely “good” or “bad,” but because they genuinely exist within this complex market ecosystem.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
11 Likes
Reward
11
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
FastLeaver
· 28m ago
In plain terms, privacy coins are a paradox, but this very contradiction is what gives them their vitality.
The reason XMR is surging is clear; it's just that everyone tacitly understands it.
View OriginalReply0
WalletDetective
· 3h ago
I'm tired of the same old talk about the gray market; the real demand is much more than that. Privacy itself is valuable, regardless of how it is used.
The logic behind the recent XMR market movements has been understood for a long time, it's just that no one dares to say it openly.
Basically, it's a matter of supply and demand; it's not that complicated, and there's no need to create a framework of neutrality or non-neutrality.
Yeah, the idea of "for and against" sounds comfortable, but the market doesn't care about morality at all. As long as there's demand, it will survive.
This is just a business, so overthinking about good or bad is a bit unnecessary. The demand for privacy won't disappear.
View OriginalReply0
TokenEconomist
· 3h ago
actually the xmr price action makes way more sense when you factor in regulatory arbitrage dynamics—think of it like traditional banking jurisdictional spreads but for privacy tech. the demand curve isn't just "gray markets," it's institutional players hedging against surveillance capitalism, ceteris paribus.
Reply0
RugResistant
· 4h ago
XMR keeps rising. To be honest, no one can really explain why, and that's what makes it the most interesting part.
The genuine demand is right there, regardless of what you think.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropHustler
· 4h ago
I understand this logic, XMR's rise is indeed a bit mysterious.
Isn't this just the norm in the crypto world? No one can really explain it clearly.
The explanation that illicit demand is too superficial, forget it.
Actually, the core of privacy coins is a double-edged sword; there's nothing to hide.
I'm still optimistic about this track, much more reliable than those purely gimmicky projects.
Its neutral attribute actually makes it more resilient; thinking about it carefully, it's quite clever.
XMR is truly so mysterious that it becomes addictive, I admit.
Real demand > public opinion, that's the reason it has lasted so long.
View OriginalReply0
RektButSmiling
· 4h ago
The recent surge in XMR's price is truly outrageous, but no one can really say for sure what's going on... really.
Privacy is a double-edged sword; it can't control people's hearts.
Whether the price goes up or down, it doesn't matter if it's good or bad, the market just needs it.
I just want to know who will be next.
Wow, you're talking like you're writing a thesis... actually, it's just money talking.
How many people pay for privacy, how many pay to hide things—anyway, XMR is making a killing.
No matter how eloquently you speak, you can't change reality.
Privacy is indeed valuable, there's no doubt about that.
Such a sharp increase must have a story behind it.
Privacy coins are indeed an interesting sector. The price trend of XMR is quite mysterious—rising all the way, but few can truly explain the reasons. Some say it’s driven by demand from gray industries, but that’s just the surface.
In fact, this precisely illustrates a phenomenon: everything has both positive and negative sides. The same applies to crypto assets. Privacy protection itself is neutral; it can be used to safeguard legitimate rights and interests, but it can also be abused. Because of this opposition, it highlights the unique value of privacy coins—they meet the market’s genuine demand for transaction privacy.
Perhaps this is why privacy coins continue to attract attention. Not because they are entirely “good” or “bad,” but because they genuinely exist within this complex market ecosystem.