These days, I’ve been cleaning up signature authorizations again. The more I do, the more I realize that wallet security is really not as simple as “remembering the seed phrase.” I now treat seed phrases as a red line—never screenshot, never upload to cloud storage, never input on any page a second time, even if it looks very official. Signatures are even more outrageous; some pages write “Confirm” gently, but behind the scenes, they might be treating your wallet like a buffet. Honestly, I’d rather miss out on a transaction than risk trusting my eyesight.



And those on-chain data tool tag systems, which are criticized for being outdated and potentially misleading, also resonate with me. In the past, seeing labels like “Secure Address” or “Suspected Official” would make me breathe easier. Now, I can only treat them as references—at most, helping me avoid one or two pitfalls, but not as a protective talisman. Anyway, my clumsy method is: try new links with a small wallet first, don’t approve authorizations if you can avoid it, and revoke them regularly even if it costs a bit of slippage—better than losing your principal to slippage.
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