Recently, I saw someone talking about re-staking and sharing security with the "compound yield" approach, arguing loudly. To put it simply, the more layers you stack, the easier it is to hide risks. Many people focus on annualized returns and forget that once you've clicked "Approve," it might be an unlimited allowance, like lending out your wallet keys without setting a return date... I personally am the type to verify transaction addresses three times, but I used to be lazy: I would just close a DEX/mining page after use without revoking permissions. Then a few days later, I saw the same phishing site and realized that as long as the contract or authorized address gets compromised, you have no chance to react. Now, my habit is: after completing an operation, I go to my wallet or use revoke tools to remove unnecessary permissions, especially unlimited ones. It’s like locking the door before bed—if you don’t lock it, you’ll keep worrying. Anyway, I’d rather click a few extra times than wake up to an empty wallet. That’s all for now.

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