These days, hardware wallets are out of stock again, and a bunch of people in the group are rushing to place orders. I, on the other hand, am a bit anxious: if it's really urgent, it's better to first stick to the most basic red lines. Don't screenshot your seed phrase, don't upload it to the cloud, and don't send it to "customer service"—frankly, anyone asking you for that stuff is just trying to steal your assets. The same goes for signing authorization; if you don't understand the popup, don't click confirm, especially those phishing sites that ask you to "upgrade your wallet / claim airdrops." Recently, the links have been countless... I personally test with small amounts on new addresses and regularly clear out permissions I use often, even if it means being slower. Anyway, I still believe: a sense of security isn't something you get just by buying a hardware wallet; it's about thinking twice before clicking confirm each time.

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