These days, I've been watching everyone compare RWA, U.S. Treasury yields, and various on-chain "yield products."


Honestly, I feel a bit uneasy: even if the yields look similar, the underlying risks are not the same.
Especially when it comes to cross-chain bridges, to put it simply, you're handing your assets over to a combination of "people + machines."

As for multi-signature setups, they seem decentralized on the surface, but really it's a question of "trust who";
the same goes for oracles—feeding incorrect data even once can be risky.
The most easily overlooked part is the "waiting for confirmation" step; many people find it slow, but I actually see it as one of the few buttons you can control yourself:
not chasing those few minutes, at least you can wait until the on-chain status is more certain, reducing the risk of rollbacks/delays/fake completions.

What I fear missing the most isn't actually opportunities, but mistaking risk for normalcy and luck for skill.
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