Regarding this, I see two basic positions:
1) We must act as much as possible to defend our privacy, discontinuing the use of use of institutions (mixers, exchanges, etc.) that actively collaborate against it and making sure that we take the utmost care of privacy in the transactions we make.
2) The loss of privacy is inevitable. Governments were not going to allow Bitcoin to reach the degree of adoption it has today as conceived by Satoshi (as a person-to-person electronic cash in which centralized institutions had little or no influence). What we must do is resign ourselves and prepare for a future with little to no privacy.
My wishful thinking says 1) but more realistically I am for option 2).
I would like to be convinced otherwise, not based on ideals but on facts.
I created a 30-day poll because I would like to know what the community thinks today. The results will be shown when it is over.
I would like to say that I would opt for option 2. The unnecesary rush towards mass adoption has for some reason become the onky thing this community is advocating for, and it just feels to soon and not what all of this was ment to be in the first place. KLet's take it down a notch and see where it takes us.