These days, I've been hearing about cross-chain bridges being hacked and oracles giving wrong prices, which really messes with my mood. To put it simply, bridges are just "holding" assets from other chains and then giving you a mapped version. The biggest risk isn't clicking the wrong button, but the trust layer behind it: multi-signature setups may seem decentralized, but if the signers are from the same risk control team or the same company, they can all fail together; the same goes for oracles—once the price feed malfunctions, on-chain contracts won't cut you any slack.



So now I increasingly understand the importance of "waiting for confirmation"... It's not procrastination, but giving the system time to expose anomalies and bring consensus back to normal, at least avoiding rushing in when things are most chaotic and turning into fuel for the fire. I don't regret being cautious—I'd rather go slower, make fewer cross-chain transactions, and if I really need to use it, test with small amounts first, confirming the route and latency are normal before scaling up. After all, safety is always more expensive after something goes wrong.
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