These days, I've seen everyone frantically interacting for airdrops, and I feel like advising but worry about being called a killjoy... Honestly, don’t think that “authorizing more, signing multiple times” is diligence; in many projects, the final scam is just your bunch of permissions. My approach is: before each interaction, think carefully about what I am actually giving up (authorization scope, signature content, whether it can be revoked). If it feels like “handing the house key to a stranger,” I stop. If I really want to participate, I don’t go all-in; keep a clean wallet dedicated to interactions, and try not to move the main wallet. If you don’t understand the signature popup, just close it first—there’s no shame in that.



Recently, hardware wallets are out of stock, and phishing links are also on the rise. Everyone’s security awareness has improved, but don’t be driven by FOMO to click links... Anyway, I now prefer to do fewer interactions rather than give permissions for an unknown airdrop. Remember to revoke permissions regularly, don’t wait until your wallet is “moved” before realizing it.
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