I'm currently looking at the project "Credibility," and I don't pay much attention to what they say verbally. First, check three things: whether GitHub updates are continuous (not just a bunch of commits piled up overnight), whether the audit report clearly states the issues and whether they actually fixed them afterward, and whether the upgrade permissions are multi-signature and not all signed by the same group. To put it simply, these three things matter more for assessing credibility than any grand narrative.



Recently, memes and celebrities shouting buy have become popular again. When attention shifts, newcomers are most likely to jump in and be the last to buy in. Anyway, I don't chase the hype myself; I prefer to take it slow. When I see permissions tighten, repair records are normal, I’ll consider small positions. This mindset keeps me much more stable.
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