After a night run, I casually checked the traffic and failure rate of the bridge, and the more I looked, the more I felt that "waiting for confirmation" is really not being pretentious. I'm just someone who monitors data anyway, and if either side of the cross-chain bridge's multi-signature or oracle has a problem, the fastest outcome isn't an on-chain explosion, but you might think the funds have arrived when they're actually still halfway there... Waiting for a few confirmations, checking if the signature address has changed, at least it can prevent you from impulsively taking the next step at the most exciting moment. Recently, there's been a lot of noise about NFT royalties and liquidity, basically betting on whether others will follow the rules, but on the bridge side, it's more direct: the rules might be changed by "a few people." Let's leave it at that for now; taking it slow isn't shameful.

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