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Spent some time looking into DataHaven's approach to data boundaries tonight, and there's something worth noting here. What caught my attention is how the protocol's shifted from simple access controls and static blacklists to something more nuanced. Rather than applying the same rules across the board, it now factors in context and recent behavioral patterns when evaluating access requests. It's not just about being stricter—it's about being smarter. The enforcement layer now adapts based on actual usage patterns and the situation at hand. This contextual evaluation feels like a meaningful step forward for privacy protocols, especially when you consider how crude most traditional access management tends to be.