You seem to have not understood the best of what is happening here.
You as a user send BTC to Mixer and they send clean coins to your BTC address. So, you have nothing with anYou seem to have not understood the best of what is happening here.
You as a user send BTC to Mixer and they send clean coins to your BTC address. So, you have nothing with any exchange.
In the background, Mixer will send your Bitcoin (as Mixero) to a decentralised exchange swap it for XMR, then send those XMR to the centralised exchange and swap XMR to BTC. That BTC can be called "clean" because it comes from a centralized exchange.
CEX (the most risky point of the whole process) cannot track XMR, so there is no reason to block funds. It seems like a good solution, now the only question is how much all the transactions will cost.y exchange.
In the background, Mixer will send your Bitcoin (as Mixero) to a decentralised exchange swap it for XMR, then send those XMR to the centralised exchange and swap XMR to BTC. That BTC can be called "clean" because it comes from a centralized exchange.
CEX (the most risky point of the whole process) cannot track XMR, so there is no reason to block funds. It seems like a good solution, now the only question is how much all the transactions will cost.
Man, I understood the whole thing what I was trying to say that the account that they use on centralized exchange for converting of XMR to BTC might get caught by the exchange as that happened with someone in past who swapped BTC to XMR via a decentralized exchange and then converted that XMR to BTC again but this time via a centralized exchange.
By keeping that I mind I asked that what if the centralized exchange somehow finds that account which is going to be used to convert XMR back to BTC and then withdraw it to Mixero's wallet? I mean the probability of centralized exchange to find it is very high because they will suspect that only XMR comes in and Bitcoin goes out then something if fishy. I think you also know that some exchanges might consider XRP to BTC transactions risky because they believe that if only XMR comes in and BTC goes out then something can be wrong.
Centralized exchanges will never be able to determine that these funds originate from our service, as previously explained, we utilize a completely empty intermediate wallet with no transaction history. Moreover, due to Monero's (XMR) design, it is impossible for the exchange to identify the existence of the source address. This means they do not know where the funds are coming from. Therefore, they cannot block the funds since they do not have access to the history and cannot trace the funds' history.
It is crucial to acknowledge that even though some centralized exchanges might use heuristic patterns to identify and block transactions they deem suspicious, we proactively ensure that this does not happen. We carefully select exchanges that do not employ such filtering based on specific patterns of incoming and outgoing transactions (for example, only XMR coming in and BTC going out). By doing so, we minimize the risk of our transactions being flagged as suspicious, thus ensuring a smoother and safer conversion process for our users from XMR to BTC.