They're storing the address used by Satoshi in tx1 before coinjoins but aren't storing tx details after mixing so they can't link anything between tx2-7.
Yes, this description is correct.
Kruw thanks you've replied when asked. You've settled questions bugging me but you're defending Wasabi Wallet when zkSNACKs isn't trusted. They're using blockchain analysis for coinjoins so tech forum users won't use it. If trust's lost it isn't easy regaining it.
However, the tricky part is that there's no way to tell what they are doing with the information the application does send to their servers.
Some information has to be sent for it to function, and it can definitely be used maliciously. Many users here agree with me, that
after the statements Wasabi officially made, we know for a fact that they do act maliciously in terms of Bitcoin's original vision of freeing people from censorship and surveillance.
If the information's anonymous or untraceable when it's sent to their servers it shouldn't matter what they're doing with it. If it's linked to users data it's inappropriate. Did tech companies run source code tests to examine information being sent to zkSNACKs ?
Kruw answered questions with strong belief in what he's said so I'll give credit on his effort. He's defending Wasabi wallet when he knows he won't convince determined users about protecting Satoshi's words but he doesn't avoid answering.
The biggest OS (I assume you mean largest marketshare or user base) is also the preferred playground for malware creators. I don't want to judge and/or compare the security of Windows vs. Linux vs. MacOS. But because Windows as OS is the preferred target for malware creators I wouldn't choose it as platform for crypto coin activities.
The biggest OS by market share. That's why malware creators target Windows because of it's popularity.