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Last night I impulsively authorized a contract again, and I saw it was still "unlimited," instantly waking me up: this thing is like sleeping with the door open, just because nothing happens doesn't mean the door lock is useless. Many people watch the liquidation price every day, but their wallet permissions are just exposed, and if they get drained, they can avoid liquidation altogether.
Why do I always love to revoke permissions?
Because I'm afraid of suddenly becoming too poor.
Recently, some people have been explaining the rise and fall of the crypto market using ETF capital flows and U.S. stock risk appetite... Fine, macro narratives sound pretty high-level, but contract authorization in this low-level death mode has nothing to do with the Nasdaq. Anyway, I now: turn off permissions after use, check the authorization list periodically, and revoke permissions before bed—more relaxing than scrolling through tweets.