Recently, I saw someone cross-chain again, and I still hold the same belief: a bridge is not "transferring funds," it's about packaging trust and sending it over. Multi-signature sounds secure, but it really depends on whether those few people or machines can all avoid messing up together; the same goes for oracles—if the price feed provider panics or gets compromised, the chain will follow suit. To put it plainly, the risk isn't binary—it's whether you're willing to admit you're gambling.



Now I prefer to go slower, waiting to confirm that this step isn't just being overly cautious, especially when the network is congested or nodes are unstable. A ten-minute delay is better than a three-year delay… If I hadn't been bothered to wait for two more confirmation rounds back then, I wouldn't have been stuck on the bridge all night and ended up paying tuition fees.

Additionally, recently some places have been tightening and loosening regulations on taxes and compliance. When deposit and withdrawal expectations change, people are more likely to rush to "find another way." At such times, I tend to be more restrained: split the amounts into smaller parts, avoid complicated routes, and focus on surviving first.
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