Swiping through on-chain data until your eyes are sore, still looking at the "Smart Money Label" and thinking of copying trades with one click—calm down first. Address profiling can be referenced, but don’t treat it as gospel: who labeled it? During what time period? The same address might be a whale yesterday and a forced liquidator today. Clustering often lumps exchanges, bots, multi-signature wallets together; they look like one person but are actually many.



Recently, AI Agents and automated trading have been hyped up, and on-chain interaction volume has indeed increased. But the more automated it is, the easier it is to fall into the illusion of "being protected by someone." To put it plainly, the fund flows are real, but the explanations for them may not be. If you really use these tools: only use them to identify risk points (like abnormal reflows, multiple addresses washing in and out in a short time), don’t use them as reasons to buy. Staying alive is more important than "following smart money."
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