Lately, I've been looking at posts about airdrop interactions again, and the more I read, the more I want to laugh: afraid of missing out on one side, and afraid of being exploited on the other. My approach is a bit rough—I'm just someone who watches the process, first dividing the wallet into layers, not touching unfamiliar contracts with the main wallet; for interactions, I use a small account, avoiding approval if possible, and if I do approve, I remember to revoke permissions after use. Then, before each operation, I pause for three seconds and think: am I verifying the product, or am I helping someone else wash tokens? If the answer is the latter, I usually just skip it. Also, don’t do meaningless transactions just to "appear human"; leaving too obvious traces on the chain is actually suspicious. Recently, the main public chain is upgrading/maintaining, and everyone in the group is guessing whether projects will migrate; I don’t chase the hype anyway. When cross-chain bridges move, I become even more cautious—prefer doing fewer transactions than waking up one day to find my wallet used as a teaching example.

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