Recently, someone asked me again if cross-chain bridges can be sped up... I now habitually look twice: who is signing with multi-signature, how many keys, does the signature distribution look like "a house full of people"; then I check where the oracle feeds the data from, in case it breaks or gets stuck, what will happen. To put it simply, the biggest fear of bridges is not slowness, but that you think the funds have arrived when they haven't actually been "truly confirmed". I would rather wait a few more minutes, anyway, waiting for confirmation is a habit, not some innate talent.



Recently, AI Agents, automated trading, and these narratives are quite popular, on-chain interactions that look very cool with one-click all-in, but the more automated it gets, the easier it is to skip steps like "confirmation, risk control, permissions"... and then problems happen even faster. My compulsive approach is: tighten limits and authorizations before cross-chain transfers, then proceed to the next step after funds arrive. Better to be a bit more troublesome, and definitely avoid touching the liquidation line.
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