I recently pulled out that paper with the seed phrase and took another look, feeling guilty as I did: losing it isn't really losing money, it's just losing the qualification to participate anymore. The same goes for signing authorization—don't be fooled by the flashy pop-up messages; honestly, clicking "Agree" once might hand over the steering wheel of your wallet. My red line for phishing sites now is: incorrect links, domain names with an extra letter, or sites that prompt you to connect/upgrade/claim immediately—treat them all as air; I’d rather miss out than fall for it.



What I fear most isn't losing money, but losing control—market fluctuations can be stopped with a stop-loss, but if your permissions are drained, there's no button to stop the damage. Recently, there's been talk about increased taxes and tighter or relaxed compliance in certain regions; as deposit and withdrawal expectations shift, everyone becomes more eager to "act quickly," but the more urgent, the easier it is to fall into traps. Anyway, I now prefer to be a bit slower: test new sites with small amounts first, give less authorization if possible, and clear old permissions periodically—this is how I do it for now.
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