Recently, people keep mixing up ETF capital flows and U.S. stock market risk appetite to interpret crypto market rises and falls. I just listen and ignore it; if I really want to take action, I still have to go back to the simple question: "Is the project reliable or not?" For beginners, I think don't focus on candlestick charts first. Look at three things: GitHub—don't just look at stars, check if there have been continuous commits in the past three months and whether it's just one or two people making changes; audit reports—don't just screenshot the logo, focus on what was found, whether it was fixed, and if there was a recheck, especially whether high-risk issues are clearly explained; and also multi-signature upgrades—can you see who the signers are, what the threshold is, and whether there are delays (timelock)? Basically, this is about "who can change the rules with one click." A few days ago, I impulsively wanted to uninstall some on-chain tools because I was getting itchy from seeing too many messages... but I held back and instead made my stance more neutral: keep the position balanced, arbitrage if possible, and leave the rest to time. Anyway, if you don't understand, take it slow—don't let trending searches press the confirm button for you.

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