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#Flow网络安全事故 Flow's recent operation serves as a textbook example of poor risk management. Blockchain rollbacks are inherently high-risk decisions, and even more outrageous is that major bridging platforms like deBridge didn't receive any communication from the Flow team—this isn't inefficiency, it's outright coordination failure.
The key point is that the economic losses caused by a hasty rollback could far exceed the original security vulnerability itself. Imagine during that chaotic window, how many honest bridges, custodians, and counterparties were forced to bear the risk. In such situations, traders following the Flow ecosystem should be especially cautious.
From a copy-trading perspective, these "black swan" events often test the true skill level of traders. Some experts can quickly identify risks, cut losses in time, or even profit from reverse operations; while some followers simply passively suffer losses. My advice is that, in the face of ecosystem-level emergencies, instead of blindly copying, it's better to reduce your position in that area, observe the target trader's response logic, and only decide whether to continue following after the risk has been released and they have analyzed the situation.
This incident with Flow also reminds us that copy trading shouldn't just focus on returns, but also on risk awareness and decision transparency. Truly reputable traders tend to have stronger communication skills in extreme situations.