Recently, when I was checking my wallet, I saw a bunch of “unlimited authorization,” basically meaning I clicked confirm back then for convenience, and it’s just been sitting there gathering dust ever since. Usually, it doesn’t seem like a big deal, but when something actually goes wrong, it’s like an unlocked door: if the contract gets hacked, you fall for a phishing attack, or even if the project team goes rogue, your assets might not just lose a little—they could be drained completely. Revoking permissions is kind of like sleeping; you can tough it out during the day, but not doing it always leaves you feeling uneasy.



And recently, that main public chain is about to upgrade/maintain, and the community is speculating whether projects will migrate. I think, whether they migrate or not, the real “migration” is those old authorizations on-chain—they’re always with you. If you don’t revoke them, they’re always there. Anyway, my current habit is: revoke after use, at least for large wallets I never leave with unlimited permissions long-term, I’d rather click a few more times.

That’s all for now.
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