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Today it’s raining and the traffic is terrible, the coffee I bought has gone cold in the car… I casually glanced at the chain and suddenly remembered the cross-chain bridge thing. Honestly, the “security” of many bridges relies entirely on multi-signatures and oracles: few signers, the same group of people, or lax key management—if something goes wrong, it’s like trying to brake in the rain; you just can’t stop. If the oracle feeds in wrong data, the bridge will accept it blindly, and no matter how good your mindset is, it’s useless.
So now I’m used to “waiting for confirmation” when doing small cross-chain transfers—not out of superstition about slow confirmation, but to let time help filter out a bunch of weird reorganization/rollback risks, at least avoid rushing in as a test subject at the first moment. Recently, everyone’s been complaining about validator income, MEV, unfair ordering, which is actually a reminder: who can queue up and who gets to trade first on the chain isn’t really decided by retail investors. Anyway, I’d rather wait a few more minutes and chase less after that “speed,” for now that’s how I’ll do it.