aPriori $Arp Airdrop ends on the 24th, only 4 days left. 🔗https://claim.apr.io/ethereum Additionally, it is reported that the project team will start a second airdrop. The first wave of airdrops has stricter checks for bots. It has been announced that the requirements for unlocking airdrop quotas on the Monad mainnet have been significantly reduced, allowing those who truly participate and patiently wait to more easily claim and unlock their tokens. The second airdrop will begin after the Monad mainnet goes live. Specific rules have yet to be released. aPriori is the largest project in the Monad ecosystem, having completed $30 million in financing. Led by Binance YZI Labs. Let's wait for the Monad mainnet to go live, hoping for good airdrop returns and price increases.
Although I lost money with OKB, the security of the OKX wallet is definitely not an issue.
Many people actually do not know that the "no backdoor" of self-custody wallets is not just a slogan, but a decision made by the technical architecture.
What is a private key?
It is the full authority over your assets; the wallet is just a tool that helps you "use" that authority.
Self-custody wallets like OKX Wallet generate, store, and sign the private key all locally on your phone.
This means two things:
First, the officials cannot access your private key;
Second, they do not have the authority to help you "sign transactions remotely."
So if someone can take your money, there are really only a few possibilities:
1. Your device is controlled by malware 2. The private key has been copied, leaked, screenshot, or synced to the cloud 3. You have authorized a malicious smart contract / dApp
But the only thing that is impossible is:
"The officials took it away."
Because logically, by code, and by architecture, they do not have that capability.
If the OK wallet has a problem, other competitors would have long since written explosive news reports.
Recently, every night before sleep, my wife and I watch a bit of "Squid Game."
In "Squid Game," each game results in a group of people dying.
For every person who dies, the prize pool increases by 100 million Korean Won.
The money in the prize pool is divided equally among the survivors.
At the end of each game, everyone can vote on whether to continue.
Some people feel they have earned enough and do not want to take any more risks, choosing to end the game and take their money.
Others believe that since they have passed the previous games, they can also succeed in the following ones.
By participating in another game, the prize could potentially double.
Choosing to continue risking their lives.
This is very similar to how we play in the cryptocurrency market.
When the tokens rise, some people choose to cash out for safety.
But people like me choose to hold on, waiting for the next wave to double.
However, the possibility of doubling comes with the risk of losing everything.
For example, when I bought okb this time, it was like that.
Initially, it was profitable, and I made quite a bit, but in pursuit of greater profits, I ultimately lost my principal.
Trading cryptocurrencies is essentially a squid game; a group of people contributes money, which is distributed to a few, and everyone has the chance to take money and leave.
But it is always due to one's own greed that they risk their life savings.