I do, yes. The domain this linked post is on is registered to my current mailing address which is the same as the one I have on my Amazon file as my shipping and my billing address.
I've changed my Amazon email address as you suggested in your helpful email and hopefully that will be enough since I don't think it would be practical to try to put my mailing address back in the bottle at this point.
Maybe technically (or maybe not--never bothered to check), but I've never heard of it ever happening.
I usually put a legitimate address that's in the same city (and sometimes the same general area). Where I actually live is completely irrelevant wrt DNS and I can think of no reason to have it trivially available to anyone who can do a WHOIS.
Check if your domain registrar offers an anonymous registration service. Mine provides it for free, but some charge a small yearly fee. It is still fine per ICANN standards since it simply goes to a forwarding service.
From ICANN's perspective though, doesn't that mean that the owner of the domain is the registrar?
While most registrars would be perfectly fine, I worry about the one that is willing to take the domain for themselves (for a domain not worth going to court over).
While not exactly what happened, I remember the case of the @N twitter account be stolen (https://medium.com/@N/how-i-lost-my-50-000-twitter-username-...), and wonder if having your actual information on the registration would help or hurt a situation like that.
I've changed my Amazon email address as you suggested in your helpful email and hopefully that will be enough since I don't think it would be practical to try to put my mailing address back in the bottle at this point.