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Many people mistakenly equate exposure with the realization of justice. In fact, exposure merely breaks the asymmetry of information; it solves the problem of "seeing," not "solving." Many exposed issues are not suddenly becoming evil—they have always existed, but were previously able to be concealed. When they enter the public eye, they only then enter the realm where they can be discussed, constrained, and corrected for the first time. Therefore, exposure is merely the starting condition for the mechanism of justice, not justice itself. Real change happens after exposure: whether rules are established, whether costs are increased, and whether behavior is continuously constrained. Only when "visible evil" is continuously governed, rather than merely seen, does it gradually approach what we call justice.