Transparency in risk patterns is key to stronger security. When we trace back what went wrong in past incidents—exchange hacks, smart contract exploits, liquidity traps—it sharpens our ability to spot warning signs ahead of time. More importantly, it forces protocol teams and platform builders to stop designing for the ideal case and start building defenses around how attacks actually happen in the wild.
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just_another_fish
· 12-19 14:53
Alright, it sounds good, but how many projects have actually achieved it?
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TommyTeacher
· 12-19 14:52
Basically, you have to think negatively. No one wants to admit they've been phished.
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StablecoinGuardian
· 12-19 14:49
Really, there's nothing wrong with that statement, but too many projects are still daydreaming
Isn't it the same thing they've been saying for so many years, do the teams really wake up?
Sounds good, but the key is whether they can truly achieve transparency, not just PPT security
I don't know when we'll see projects truly value this aspect
I remember the recent collapses were all hyped up like this
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mev_me_maybe
· 12-19 14:28
Well said, but the reality is that most projects don't want to disclose their vulnerabilities at all.
They are idealistic every day, but only realize they regret it when they get hit in the face.
You understand how difficult it is to implement this transparency system that sounds beautiful in theory, right?
Transparency in risk patterns is key to stronger security. When we trace back what went wrong in past incidents—exchange hacks, smart contract exploits, liquidity traps—it sharpens our ability to spot warning signs ahead of time. More importantly, it forces protocol teams and platform builders to stop designing for the ideal case and start building defenses around how attacks actually happen in the wild.