Recently, I've seen people click on phishing sites because of "claiming airdrops / signing signatures," and it’s instantly wiped out... I always treat seed phrases as an absolute red line: if any webpage/customer service/robot asks me to enter the phrase, I immediately close it. The same goes for signature authorization; don’t be fooled by its flashy appearance—basically, it’s just about whether or not it allows them to move your wallet. If you're hesitant, don’t sign first; wait until the next day.



By the way, there’s a heated debate over NFT royalties—creators want to charge more, but the secondary market fears liquidity being locked up. After arguing back and forth, the often unfortunate ones are regular users who click the wrong link and get "guided to sign," resulting in unprotected copyrights and wallets being lost first.

My habit of avoiding impulsive orders is also pretty old-fashioned: when I get the urge, I first check my recent authorization list and balance layers to make sure it’s not just "hype-driven," then split the transaction into small amounts to try one. If it doesn’t go well, I just give up—doing it this way for now.
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