Recently, people have been fixated on staking unlocks and token unlock calendars, worrying about "selling pressure anxiety," but what I fear more is another, more hidden issue: granting unlimited contract permissions and then forgetting about it. To put it simply, you're not betting on the price; you're leaving the keys to your wallet on someone else's table without asking about the expiration date.



Having unlimited permissions feels great in the moment—one click and you don't need to sign repeatedly—but on the blockchain, it's so rigid: as long as the permission exists, it's effectively always valid, even if you haven't used that dApp for a long time. Forget it, to put it plainly: revoking permissions is like locking the door before sleep. It doesn't give you a sense of profit, but it really helps you sleep more peacefully. One day, if the protocol has an issue, the front end gets hijacked, or you click the wrong link, having fewer permissions to revoke means fewer "entry points" that can be taken away without your knowledge. Anyway, I now scan my permissions every now and then—better to spend a few extra minutes on gas/time than to rely on luck.
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