Seeing "approve unlimited" now feels as uncomfortable as seeing your bedside lamp without a charger plugged in... Anyway, authorization is like locking the door before bed—nothing feels wrong during the day, but if something goes wrong, it’s a total disaster. Others might think it’s just confirming on a DEX to make things easier next time; in reality, it’s like leaving the “transfer rights” to certain assets in your wallet exposed for a long time. If a contract has a vulnerability, the frontend gets replaced, or routing is hijacked, liquidation bots and MEV guys won’t show you any mercy.



Recently, some people have been complaining that on-chain data tools and tagging systems are lagging behind. To put it simply, by the time you tag and label “malicious contracts,” it might already be too late. My habit is: revoke permissions after use, especially for obscure protocols or airdrop interactions; if I’m too lazy to do it manually, I find a revoke tool, run it before bed, so I don’t wake up to an empty wallet and think I misremembered my balance. That’s all for now.
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