$MYX Last night when everyone said myx got rugged and is done , I sat in a buy position live right in front of you guys and it touched almost 1.8$ 🫡🫡
Always calculate and manage your risks, and take educated trades.
Capital protection is the main thing , because if you have capital you can recover losses , you can make profit but if you over leaverage or over trade and blow your account , you'll miss the easy money opportunities coming your way 🫡
TMM over and out
also to the fellow creators out their please stop copying my content , and if you do so give credits .
Japan’s latest inflation data shows continued moderation.
The nationwide CPI rose 1.5% year on year in January. Core CPI, which excludes fresh food but includes energy, increased 2%, matching expectations. This is down from December’s 2.4% and marks the slowest pace in two years.
The CPI excluding both food and energy rose 2.6% annually, the smallest increase in nearly a year. That suggests underlying price pressures are easing.
Why is it important 👇🏽
• Reinforces gradual disinflation trend • Reduces urgency for aggressive tightening • Impacts yen positioning and JGB yields • Influences expectations around Bank of Japan policy normalization
Markets will now assess whether inflation stabilizes near target or weakens further. The path of Japanese monetary policy remains data dependent.
The Unbearable Weight of Being Watched: Reclaiming Privacy in a Transparent Age
Do you remember the last time you felt truly alone? Not lonely, but alone in the positive sense, free from the gaze of others, unobserved, unmeasured, simply present in a space that belonged only to you. Perhaps it was a walk in the woods where no cell signal reached. Perhaps it was a room in your home where you knew no device was listening. Perhaps it was a moment so ordinary you did not mark it, only later realizing that you had experienced something increasingly rare: the sensation of being unobserved.
This experience is becoming a luxury. The architecture of modern life has been constructed around a fundamental assumption that you should be visible at all times. Not for your protection, though that is the justification offered. Not for your convenience, though that is the marketing language used. But for purposes that remain largely opaque to you, purposes determined by entities whose interests diverge from yours, purposes that treat your life as raw material for their optimization.
The scale of this observation is difficult to comprehend. Every search query, every location ping, every purchase, every scroll, every pause, every like, every second of attention is recorded, analyzed, and fed into models that predict your behavior with increasing accuracy. These models do not know you as a person. They know you as a set of probabilities, a collection of propensities, a bundle of vulnerabilities to be exploited for engagement. The you that exists in their databases is not you. It is a caricature, a simplification, a ghost made of data points. Yet this ghost has power over your life. It determines what information you see, what opportunities you encounter, what prices you are offered. The ghost decides, and the real you lives with the consequences.
Consider the feeling of searching for something private, a health concern, a relationship question, a financial worry, and then seeing advertisements related to that search follow you across the internet for weeks. The message is clear: you were observed, and you will not be allowed to forget it. The privacy of your concern has been violated, not by a human who might exercise discretion, but by a system that has no concept of discretion, only data and its monetization.
Consider the experience of being denied a loan or insurance based on decisions made by algorithms you cannot see, using data you did not knowingly provide, evaluating you against models you cannot contest. The decision may be accurate in a statistical sense while being deeply unjust in an individual one. But you have no recourse because you have no access to the reasoning. You are judged by a system that refuses to explain itself.
Consider the parent posting photos of their child, wanting to share joy with distant family, unaware that those images are being fed into facial recognition databases, used to train models that will shape the future their child inherits. The choice to share seems innocent. The consequences are invisible. The child grows into a world where their face is already known to systems they never consented to.
These are not separate issues. They are facets of a single condition: the asymmetry of visibility in digital space. You are transparent to systems that remain opaque to you. They see everything while showing nothing. They learn constantly while remaining inscrutable. They adapt to your behavior while you cannot adapt to theirs. This asymmetry is not accidental. It is the business model of the surveillance economy, the source of its power and its profit.
The response to this condition cannot be simply opting out. For most people, opting out of digital systems means opting out of modern life entirely, an impossible choice. The response must be structural, a fundamental redesign of how visibility operates in digital space. It must create conditions where you can participate without being perpetually observed, where you can prove what is necessary without revealing what is not, where the asymmetry of visibility is reversed or at least balanced.
This is the deeper purpose of self-sovereign identity and zero-knowledge proofs, technologies that the intelligent chain was designed to support. They enable a radical shift in the privacy paradigm. Instead of broadcasting your data and hoping it will be protected, you retain control and reveal only what is necessary, only when necessary, only to whom necessary.
Consider how this transforms the health search scenario. With self-sovereign identity, you could prove you are researching a condition without revealing which condition. You could access information while remaining opaque to the systems that currently track your every query. The knowledge you seek would be yours without becoming data to be monetized.
Consider how it transforms the lending scenario. You could prove your creditworthiness through verifiable credentials without revealing the underlying transactions that established it. You could demonstrate reliability without exposing the details of your financial life. The algorithm could evaluate you based on proofs you control rather than surveillance you cannot escape.
Consider how it transforms the parenting scenario. You could share images with family through encrypted channels where facial recognition cannot operate. You could ensure that your child's face remains unknown to systems that would otherwise harvest it without consent. The joy of sharing would not come at the cost of future surveillance.
These capabilities are not theoretical. They are being built into the infrastructure today. The semantic memory layer enables credentials that carry meaning without exposing content. The identity tools allow selective disclosure, proving attributes without revealing identities. The privacy-preserving computation enables verification without visibility. Each layer of the stack was designed with the understanding that privacy is not a feature to be added later but a foundation to be built upon.
The team behind this infrastructure understood something essential that many technologists miss. Privacy is not about hiding. It is about dignity. It is about the right to be a person rather than a data set, to have boundaries that are respected, to exist in the world without being constantly measured and modeled. It is about the spaces, physical and digital, where you can simply be, without performing for an audience you cannot see.
This understanding shaped their choices. They did not build a chain that merely enables private transactions, though that matters. They built a chain that enables private personhood, the ability to carry your identity, your credentials, your relationships through digital space without surrendering them to surveillance. They built infrastructure that respects the boundary between public and private, between what must be shared and what can remain yours alone.
The significance of this work extends beyond any single application. It addresses the fundamental imbalance of the digital age, the way that technology has been used to make us visible to power while keeping power invisible to us. It offers a path toward rebalancing, toward a digital world where you are not merely observed but respected, not merely tracked but trusted, not merely known but understood on your own terms.
For everyone who has felt the creep of surveillance into spaces that should be private, this infrastructure offers hope. For everyone who has wondered what data is being collected and how it is being used, these tools offer control. For everyone who believes that dignity requires boundaries, this chain offers a way to draw them.
The work continues. The tools improve. The community grows. Each person who claims their self-sovereign identity, each developer who builds privacy-preserving applications, each user who demands better from the systems they use, contributes to a future where being watched is no longer the default condition of digital life.
There is something about the weight of silence that I have been thinking about. Not the uncomfortable silence between strangers but the peaceful silence that comes when you are exactly where you belong. The kind of silence where you do not need to fill the space with words because the presence itself is enough. I have spent my whole life searching for that silence and I did not expect to find it here
Before this I carried a restlessness that I could not name. It followed me everywhere. Into relationships into jobs into quiet evenings at home. There was always a voice whispering that I should be somewhere else doing something else becoming someone else. I chased that voice across continents and careers and never caught it
When I first found this space I thought it would be the same. Another thing to chase. Another place to feel like an outsider. Another reminder that everyone else seemed to know something I did not
But something different happened
I think it started with the way people said my name. Not my username but the name I told them when they asked. In most online spaces no one asks. You are your handle your avatar your transaction history. Here someone asked on my third day and I almost did not know how to answer
That small thing opened something. Once someone knows your name you become real to them. And once you are real to them you cannot disappear into the crowd
I started showing up more after that. Not because I had something to say but because I wanted to hear what others were saying. I wanted to know how the builder in Brazil was doing with their project. I wanted to check on the student in Kenya who was learning to code. I wanted to see if the artist in Indonesia had finally launched their gallery
These people became part of my days without me planning it. I would wake up and wonder if the builder had solved their bug. I would go to sleep thinking about the student's exam. Their lives wove into mine across oceans and time zones and languages
This is the part of the story that does not fit into the usual narratives about technology. It is not about efficiency or disruption or any of the words we use to make progress sound clinical. It is about the ancient human need to matter to someone else
I think about what makes this possible and it is not just the technology though the technology helps. It is the choice that everyone here makes every day to see each other. Not as users or wallets or metrics but as people with names and dreams and struggles
I watched someone last week share that they had been laid off from their job. Within hours the community had compiled a list of freelance opportunities reached out to their networks and offered encouragement that went far beyond empty platitudes. By the end of the week they had three project offers from people who had never met them
That is not a network effect. That is a family effect I have been thinking about the builders who made this possible. They could have built anything. They chose to build a place where this kind of thing can happen. They chose to prioritize the features that remove friction from human connection. They chose to design a system that rewards contribution not just capital
The speed matters because when someone is in crisis waiting is not acceptable. The low fees matter because help should not cost more than the help itself. The accessibility matters because the person who needs community most is often the one who has the hardest time finding it
I think about the restlessness that followed me for so long and I realize it has quieted. Not because I have answered all my questions or solved all my problems but because I have found a place where I do not have to carry them alone
There is a silence here that I have been searching for my whole life. It is the silence of being known. It is the silence of putting down the weight of pretending. It is the silence that comes when you finally stop looking for somewhere else to be
البائعون يمارسون الضغط لكن المشترين لا يزالون نشيطين.
الدخول بسعر السوق حتى 1.55 الإيقاف 1-3% من المحفظة الموصى به (أو 1.42) أو وفقاً لنسبة المخاطرة والمكافأة الخاصة بك الهدف 100% من الهامش على الأقل أو أكثر من 1.72$ احسب وأدر مخاطرك الخاصة، فحفظ رأس المال هو المهمة الأولى 👇🏽👇🏽👇🏽👇🏽