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Recently, while monitoring on-chain data, I discovered an interesting phenomenon—Ethereum mainnet's single-day transaction volume just broke a record, reaching 1.87 million transactions. This number even surpasses the peak levels seen during the previous NFT boom and DeFi explosion.
My first reaction to this data was excitement, but upon further examining the Gas consumption rankings, the tone immediately shifted. Out of the top 15 addresses, 12 are clearly marked as phishing scam sites. This is quite ironic—behind the thriving transaction activity, there is actually a large amount of malicious activity driving it.
From another perspective, this reflects a reality: whenever market activity increases and new users flood in, hackers and scammers also become more active. They seem to treat the end of the year as a window for performance. On one side, normal user transactions are growing; on the other, malicious behaviors like phishing, trojans, and smart contract exploits are lurking in the shadows.
This serves as a warning: looking at on-chain data and transaction volume alone is meaningless; we must also pay attention to the quality behind the transactions. Ethereum's prosperity is real, but so are the security risks. When participating in the ecosystem, stay vigilant—it's always better to be safe than sorry.