Recently, I checked my wallet's authorization list again and found several "unlimited" permissions still active, which instantly woke me up... This thing is like sleeping; if you don't do anything, you're always owed. Basically, you're leaving the key at the door, and once the protocol/frontend encounters a problem or the contract logic is exploited, you might think you're just monitoring extreme funding rates, struggling with reversals, or continuing to pump the bubble, but in reality, the risk could slip in through another entry point.



When I draw dependency diagrams, I'm most afraid of nodes where "one line connects to a bunch of assets": authorizations = direct channels between assets and contracts, the thicker the line, the more dangerous. Now my habit is: revoke after use, or at least set limits; try small amounts with new protocols first, and check once before overnight—it's almost like turning off the lights. Talk again next time.
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