The privacy story of youron-chain activity
Why blockchains make anonymity hard. How patterns leak identity. What changes when you use privacy tools.
Most of the time, privacy doesn't matter.
You trade. You swap. Nothing bad happens.
But everything you do is public.
Blockchains are public databases. Anyone can replay your entire history. This data never expires.
Patterns are where identity leaks.
Surveillance firms don't need your name. These three dimensions are enough to fingerprint you.
Patterns alone are enough to identify you across wallets.
One action can permanently reduce privacy.
One exchange deposit. One interaction with a labeled wallet. One careless transaction.
Some links cannot be undone.
Why starting fresh doesn't fully work.
New wallets inherit behavioral patterns from funding and counterparties
Timing and counterparties correlate across wallets—probabilistic matching finds you
Surveillance is probabilistic, not naive—patterns betray you
What just happened to my privacy?
How a privacy layer changes your traceability — without hiding or erasing anything.
In one sentence
encrypt.trade reduces how much others can reliably infer from your future on-chain activity.
See what your wallet already reveals.
Analyze a walletWhy switch to encrypt.trade?
Your wallet already reveals more than you think. encrypt.trade helps you reduce future exposure without changing the past.
Break the links
Reduce traceable connections between your wallet and exchanges or labeled addresses.
Reduce surveillance accuracy
Make clustering and profiling harder so tracking becomes less reliable.
Selective privacy
Protect future activity without hiding or erasing your existing on-chain history.
LeakLens shows you the problem. encrypt.trade helps you address it.