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#合约诈骗与虚假网站 ZEROBASE's recent phishing incident is worth reviewing. 250,000 USDT lost, with a single loss of 123,000 — these are not small numbers.
Let me summarize the key points: front-end being impersonated, malicious contracts tricking users into granting permissions, users unknowingly giving USDT permissions to malicious actors — this process is quite old news, but people still fall for it every time. The most heartbreaking part is that these risks often occur when users are trying to participate in high-yield projects like yield farming and liquidity mining.
Friends who follow trading signals should be especially cautious. I’ve seen people following a big V on social media, and in pursuit of a "complete" strategy setup, they authorize unknown or new contracts. Little do they know, hackers are also watching these frequently interacted-with, well-funded wallets.
The current emergency solution is to revoke risky permissions using revoke.cash. This tool should be bookmarked, and regularly checking your wallet’s authorization list has become a necessary routine. Recommendations: 1. Only authorize contracts you are actively interacting with, and revoke permissions after use; 2. Don’t keep large amounts of funds idle in a single wallet — diversify to manage risk; 3. If you’re following signals and want to participate in mining or other strategies, open a small separate account to test the waters.
High returns are tempting, but the premise is to protect your principal.