AirdropLunchbox

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These days, liquidity dries up quickly, and the market looks like a car out of fuel—no matter how much you press, it just won't move. To be honest, during times like this, don't rush to buy the dip; focus on survival first: don't fully load your positions, reduce leverage, and if you can withdraw liquidity, do so and keep it in stablecoins. Holding some bullets is more useful than guessing the bottom.
Developers are excited about narratives like modularization and the DAO layer. I find it pretty engaging to scroll through, but the user experience is basically "Huh? So which button should I cli
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Let’s go, HP—give it a boost and go all out. First, take down 0.0160, then we’ll talk.
HP-0,91%
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LedgerBull
$HP showing range-bound movement with slight bullish pressure building.
Buyers attempting control as structure stabilizes on lower timeframes.
EP
0.0154 - 0.0156
TP
TP1 0.0160
TP2 0.0165
TP3 0.0170
SL
0.0150
Liquidity below 0.0154 was tapped before a mild upside reaction, indicating demand. Consolidation with higher lows suggests potential continuation if buyers maintain pressure above the range.
Let’s go $HP ‌
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The most frightening thing is the "whitewashing reputation" approach: first piling up organizations, accumulating contributions, then coming to get contracts—impossible to guard against.
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CryptoSat
Major Security Alert in Web3 🚨
An Ethereum Foundation-funded project (Ketman) has uncovered ~100 North Korean (DPRK) IT workers who infiltrated Web3 companies using fake identities.
Over a 6-month investigation, they identified these operatives across ~53 crypto projects and alerted the affected teams.
Many were operating through polished GitHub organizations to win contracts and launder reputation.
A serious reminder: insider threats and fake remote developers remain a real risk in crypto hiring.
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Lately, completing new chain tasks feels a bit like rushing to catch a meal, worried about missing out if I’m late, and my hands get itchy wanting to interact a few more times. I later realized that the easiest way to avoid being counter-rolled isn’t by doing nothing, but by rushing too much: messy paths, scattered addresses, even when one set is enough, still forcing traces, and finally getting wiped out by the anti-witch sweep. Now I treat it like meal prep, fixed a few clean accounts, interact on a weekly check-in rhythm, and if gas fees feel too high, I stop first—prefer doing less rather
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My wallet is getting more and more open, and my assets are also fragmented... To be honest, it's not that I have a lot of money, but that I have many tasks. My simple method: treat the main wallet as the "main body of the lunchbox" and don't mess with it, dedicating it to long-term holdings; open a separate small account for each new chain as a sub-container, and after completing interactions, regularly consolidate the remaining gas and scattered coins back in, or else in a couple of weeks I won't even be able to find them myself. Also, give addresses nicknames and record progress (what step I
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The testing network tasks have heated up again over the past two weeks, and the group is guessing every day whether the mainnet will issue tokens... I'm just going with the "worst-case scenario" for now: if they do issue tokens, consider it an extra treat; if not, don't risk your assets. For small asset amounts (like just a few thousand dollars), I think mobile social recovery is pretty hassle-free; if you lose your phone, you can recover it, but only if you truly trust that contact mechanism. For medium-sized assets, I still prefer hardware wallets; signing on them feels more secure, and I te
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