Recently, hardware wallets are out of stock again, and everyone in the group is panicking and rushing to snatch them up. I, on the other hand, first took out my own wallet and rechecked the paper with the seed phrase… To put it simply: don’t let “can’t buy” turn into “more careless.”



I thought I was being pretty cautious, but last night I almost clicked a link for an “Airdrop Query.” The page looked exactly like the real thing—so convincing that I almost had to sign to grant permission. Luckily, I’m used to checking the domain first, then looking at what the pop-up asks permission to do. If something feels off, I just close it.

Don’t screenshot the seed phrase, don’t upload it to a cloud drive, and don’t send it to anyone. Give away as little as possible in terms of signatures/permissions—especially those with unlimited limits. I’d rather be a bit more troublesome than save time and risk it. During the peak phishing period, everyone keeps calling for everyone to be careful—but really, it’s just one sentence: if you don’t understand, don’t sign. If you feel even a little uneasy, just exit.

That’s it for now.
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