Recently, I’ve been seeing project teams post GitHub screenshots + audit reports + multi-signature upgrades, feeling like I’m looking at the three pieces of a “I’m very reliable” set... But newbies really shouldn’t just look at the surface. If GitHub hasn’t had any activity for half a year, then suddenly a week of intense commits, doesn’t that look like cramming before an exam? Audit reports shouldn’t just focus on “approved,” flip through the conclusions to see if there’s any mention of “high risk unpatched/partially covered,” basically, whether they’ve pointed out the pitfalls. Upgrading multi-signature is even more critical—who are the signers, how many people can make the final decision, can they change rules with a single click in the middle of the night? That’s the real key. Recently, memes and celebrity shoutouts are starting to cycle again, and newcomers tend to get hyped up and take the final shot. My only message: memes are fun, don’t treat your position as a meme. Think clearly about how to exit before rushing in.

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