Recently, I saw someone test network incentives and earn points by connecting their wallet to a bunch of small apps, and they casually gave "unlimited authorization." Basically, this is like copying a house key and leaving it in the hallway: you don’t feel it usually, but if the contract has an issue or gets replaced, your assets could be directly drained, and it has nothing to do with whether the mainnet issues tokens or not. If something goes wrong, no one will compensate you.



My current obsessive-compulsive process is: after interaction, I immediately revoke permissions, at least remove the ones I don’t use often, and set a limit for the few I do use regularly. Revoking authorization is really as important as sleeping; doing it makes me feel at ease. Otherwise, I keep feeling at night that I forgot to turn off the lights somewhere. Anyway, I’d rather have fewer "points efficiency" than gamble my luck once.
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