Recently, some people keep using ETF capital flows and U.S. stock market risk appetite to explain crypto price swings, and they talk like experts—but what I care about more is whether the protocols I hold are actually reliable. For beginners, when you read “credibility,” I think you should not start by looking at K线; first, look at three things: whether GitHub is being continuously updated— not something where there’s a burst of activity for a week and then six months of “lying still”; don’t just scan the logo on an audit report—focus on what was found, whether the issues were fixed, and whether it was re-audited; and finally, consider multi-signature upgrades—who can modify the contract, and how many people can make the decision. If the threshold is too low, I assume it could be “kindly” upgraded to a version I don’t recognize at any time. In plain terms, only after you’ve checked these should you talk about position sizing and stop-loss levels—no matter how hot the market is, I don’t want a romantic war with the trend.

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