In the past, when I saw "someone is airdropping," I would get itchy, and my wallet would click away as if it had autopilot; now I first disconnect from the internet for ten minutes, and when I come back, I only ask three questions: Why am I interacting (really want to use it or just trying to farm), what’s the worst case I could lose (authorization, signatures, gas, privacy), and what are the exit conditions (for example, stop after doing X times, don’t keep recharging infinitely). To put it simply, avoiding malicious attacks boils down to two points: don’t give unlimited permissions randomly, and if you can use a new wallet, don’t use your main wallet; also, don’t chase hot chain tasks until midnight—when your emotions are high, you’re more likely to sign recklessly. Recently, expectations of rate cuts and the dollar index have stirred up risk asset sentiment, with discussions of both rising and falling intensifying, and airdrop groups are also getting restless… I just treat it as noise, and only interact with the few steps I can review afterward. Better to miss out than treat your wallet like a lottery machine.

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