I once tried to categorize my own positions based on "asset size": small hot wallets for casual use, large amounts directly on hardware wallets, and key assets wrapped in multi-signature layers. To put it simply, hardware wallets are suitable for "I just want to keep the private key offline," but if you frequently interact and are worried about slipping up before signing, then multi-signature + whitelists are actually more secure, just a bit more complicated. I've also looked into social recovery, which is suitable for "worried about losing mnemonic phrases," but personally I worry about trust boundaries—having many acquaintances can easily turn into an entry point for social engineering... Anyway, each has its pitfalls.



Recently, everyone has been interpreting ETF fund flows, US stock risk appetite, and crypto prices together, and I can't help but chuckle: macro is macro, but the real key is the moment you sign. First, streamline withdrawal channels and permissions; that's more important than daily mood charts.
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