Recently, I've seen a bunch of airdrop interaction tutorials becoming more and more esoteric, and in the end, I realize I am the "liquidity provider"… To put it simply, the places where you can be anti-rug pulled are usually written into the fees: too much authorization, bridges too far, signing contracts without reading them. My approach is very simple: use a small account with little money to test the waters, if I can withdraw everything at once, I won't split it into ten transactions; if I have to repeatedly switch chains or re-authorize, I just ignore it.



The RWA and US bond yield strategies are also brought in to compare with on-chain yields. It’s lively, but the more "stable-looking" packaging is, the easier it is to let your guard down, and as soon as FOMO kicks in, you add more. Anyway, I treat complexity as an enemy: if the process exceeds three steps or explanations are convoluted, I won't do it. Airdrops are like lotteries, not salaries. Don’t treat your wallet as a target just for a "possible screenshot."
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