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Before the 2008 financial crisis, Lehman Brothers had already sounded the alarm internally. It’s not that no one saw the problems, but that the risks seemed too minor—just a spreadsheet, a contract, a slight leverage adjustment. Taken alone, none of these are "fatal wounds."
But what is truly deadly? Everyone thinks: these details aren’t worth paying attention to anymore.
Today’s blockchain world almost daily repeats this story.
The first time you stumble, it’s usually because you don’t understand. The second, third times are different—not because we’ve become dumber, but because we’re too familiar. How familiar? Seeing those familiar contracts, interfaces, operational flows, your fingers react faster than your brain. Confirmation becomes muscle memory, authorization turns into a reflex, risk alerts fade into background noise.
Looking at those on-chain crashes, you’ll notice an counterintuitive pattern: the trouble often isn’t from cutting-edge new protocols or innovative gameplay, but from old, outdated logic combined with new variables.
Cross-chain bridge attacked? It’s usually not because the bridge itself is overly complex, but because some verification step was "optimized." DeFi faces liquidation risks? It’s not the entire mechanism collapsing, but a certain parameter, a price feed, or a time window being ignored.
The system itself isn’t inherently difficult. What has decreased is our cautious attitude towards it.
There’s a cold, hard rule on-chain: it doesn’t assume we will make mistakes, but it will definitely punish our errors. Contracts won’t ask you "Isn’t clicking so fast too hasty?" Protocols don’t care if you "didn’t read the terms carefully." They only execute, and the rest is left to reality.