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CandyDrop
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Recently, I went back through my wallet’s authorization history and found that several projects from back then that said “charge subsidies first” still have unlimited approvals… Basically, it’s the same as not locking the door—nothing goes wrong most of the time, but once something happens, it’s hard to sleep soundly. Revoking permissions is as important as sleeping: you can still get by without doing it, but after you do it, your mind feels a lot steadier.
Now Layer2 is comparing TPS, fees, and ecosystem subsidies every day, and the noise is pretty lively. Ironically, I’m even more afraid that in a moment like this, I’ll slip and start clicking links everywhere and signing everything. My clumsy workaround: after every interaction, I check the authorizations on the spot—limit them when I can, revoke them when I can; and also, I’d rather grab a little less than I should, than get lazy and open up all permissions to the maximum just to save time. It’s really depressing—there are too many traps on-chain—but at least these little actions can help keep the risk down a bit. For now, I’ll leave it at that.