Recently, I've seen a bunch of people explain the rise and fall of the crypto market using ETF inflows and outflows and U.S. stock risk appetite, as if it's like physical laws... Fine, macro factors can influence sentiment, but if your wallet gets stolen by a phishing site, macro won't save you.



Don't deceive yourself with "taking a screenshot and saving it to the album" or "sending it to your secondary account" for mnemonic phrases; basically, that's equivalent to making it public. Don't just click confirm when you see a pop-up for signature authorization, especially on sites that ask you to "update your wallet" or "claim airdrops"; granting authorization is basically handing over the keys. If you really want to try new things, use a separate small wallet, keep less money in it, and revoke permissions after use—don't think it's troublesome. Every day at the bridge, I ask if you've brought your proof; if you think I'm nagging... then I wish you don't encounter a more nagging hacker.
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