Recently, I saw someone give "unlimited" access in a contract again, which is basically like handing the keys to your house to a stranger... It might be fine for now, but someday if the contract gets upgraded, permissions are taken over, or the front end is changed, you might wake up to find your wallet turned into a buffet. I now treat revoking permissions like brushing my teeth before bed: use it and then take it back, especially for lending platforms and aggregators that can move your assets.



These days, there's a mainstream blockchain network scheduled for upgrade/maintenance, and everyone in the group is guessing whether the project will migrate. I don't know if it will migrate or not, but during such node fluctuations or bridge glitches, the most likely to cause issues. My habit is: grant permissions only up to a "just enough" limit, and add more if needed temporarily; even with small positions, don’t be lazy—leaving permissions is like hidden leverage, and the risk isn't shown on the dashboard. That’s all for now.
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