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摸金校尉白东旭

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韭菜的命运是亏完 海水即将退去! 世界格局已定。 固化阶级也已完成。 B圈将彻底颠覆未来所有商业。 没有进入这个圈的人大概率会返贫,或者在返贫的路上。 听不懂这几句话的人也不要着急反驳。 三年后以后你会再次回想起这几句话的时候为时已晚。 能听懂的人私聊我。🈶财富密码! #美国加征关税
韭菜的命运是亏完

海水即将退去!

世界格局已定。
固化阶级也已完成。

B圈将彻底颠覆未来所有商业。

没有进入这个圈的人大概率会返贫,或者在返贫的路上。

听不懂这几句话的人也不要着急反驳。
三年后以后你会再次回想起这几句话的时候为时已晚。

能听懂的人私聊我。🈶财富密码!

#美国加征关税
首先我之前说过这次的牛市是属于大饼的牛市。 第二二级市场的所有人人最后百分之九十九都会亏的只剩裤衩。 第三当下金融格局已经到了最尴尬的局面。你想赚钱只能去一级市场(但是还不能梭哈,而且我认为你们也找不到金狗) 第四从玄学来讲,财富是按照认识和福报分配的。不是按照你的自以为是决定的。 钱是四条腿,人是两条腿。两条腿肯定追不上四条腿。 第五HY的终点🏁是亏完,韭菜的命运也是亏完。 如何不做韭菜呢,学习才是第一永动力。 第六挣钱的逻辑很简单,那就是你先有认知才会有财富。(财富是认识的变现) 第七如何把认识装到脑袋,钱自然会装进入到您的口袋。 第八相信是一种能力,更是一种福报的体现。 搞懂这一句话你就能超越币圈百分之九十的玩家。 第九,据我观察。这里百分之九十八的KOL博主都是韭菜思维。 最后,能把这篇文章读懂的人最终都能在币圈得到大结果。听不懂的都是命运的终结者“韭菜”。
首先我之前说过这次的牛市是属于大饼的牛市。

第二二级市场的所有人人最后百分之九十九都会亏的只剩裤衩。

第三当下金融格局已经到了最尴尬的局面。你想赚钱只能去一级市场(但是还不能梭哈,而且我认为你们也找不到金狗)

第四从玄学来讲,财富是按照认识和福报分配的。不是按照你的自以为是决定的。
钱是四条腿,人是两条腿。两条腿肯定追不上四条腿。

第五HY的终点🏁是亏完,韭菜的命运也是亏完。
如何不做韭菜呢,学习才是第一永动力。

第六挣钱的逻辑很简单,那就是你先有认知才会有财富。(财富是认识的变现)

第七如何把认识装到脑袋,钱自然会装进入到您的口袋。

第八相信是一种能力,更是一种福报的体现。
搞懂这一句话你就能超越币圈百分之九十的玩家。

第九,据我观察。这里百分之九十八的KOL博主都是韭菜思维。

最后,能把这篇文章读懂的人最终都能在币圈得到大结果。听不懂的都是命运的终结者“韭菜”。
👍
👍
老猫laomao
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跟牛人学习
做到真诚、谦卑、听话、靠谱、感恩,认真做事。
真诚感恩我不解释,没有这个心性,你一个牛人都留不住。
谦卑、听话,是指牛人说什么,你就相信什么、关注什么、重视什么、听话执行,不怀疑、不反驳、不对抗、不背叛、不仇恨,态度好,尊重牛人,不抹黑他,人前人后不说牛人坏话,关心牛人日常生活,及其家人、朋友,爱屋及乌。
靠谱是指,及时反馈,句句有回应,事事有着落,值得信任,值得托付事情。
以上能做到,接下去,就是长年跟随牛人的指引,用时间换信任,用做成事证明能力,牛人会把核心的东西教授给你以上做不到,牛人有关键的秘密,都不告诉你,不教你。
牛人,不是指说话牛X,而是他有了实际的成果,有钱、有权、有资源、有人脉、有专业能力。
世界上有很多假牛人,没有结果,话语听起来厉害,跟错这样的人,将来还是混不出结果。
利好就是利空。 利空就是利好。 你要反着来。这就是人性,人性是逆向思维。 不过这次回调应该就是要让漂亮国更多的资本家进场。 就像CZ讲的,感谢美国,因为它代表着全球币圈的未来。所以作为投资者需要做到一个长期投资主义者。 而不是去做一个韭菜,天天冲土狗,天天做HY。涨了追高,跌了割肉。这就是韭菜的做法。 记住,任何一个在币圈拿到结果的人都必须要有信仰。 除了信仰就是要敬畏市场,敬畏认知,敬畏人性,敬畏自己。。。。。。做一个爱学习的投资者。 最后一句话送给大家,在币圈想拿到大结果必然只有一级市场。别无他路。(这句话看懂的就是赢家,看不懂的也不接受反驳,你就是个韭菜。)
利好就是利空。

利空就是利好。

你要反着来。这就是人性,人性是逆向思维。

不过这次回调应该就是要让漂亮国更多的资本家进场。
就像CZ讲的,感谢美国,因为它代表着全球币圈的未来。所以作为投资者需要做到一个长期投资主义者。
而不是去做一个韭菜,天天冲土狗,天天做HY。涨了追高,跌了割肉。这就是韭菜的做法。
记住,任何一个在币圈拿到结果的人都必须要有信仰。
除了信仰就是要敬畏市场,敬畏认知,敬畏人性,敬畏自己。。。。。。做一个爱学习的投资者。

最后一句话送给大家,在币圈想拿到大结果必然只有一级市场。别无他路。(这句话看懂的就是赢家,看不懂的也不接受反驳,你就是个韭菜。)
选择大于努力,有智慧的人才能做出对的选择,大聪明都在自以为是的努力活着。
选择大于努力,有智慧的人才能做出对的选择,大聪明都在自以为是的努力活着。
Quoted content has been removed
这看似简单的话题,可惜很多人看不懂。不信你看有几个人回复老师您😇
这看似简单的话题,可惜很多人看不懂。不信你看有几个人回复老师您😇
Quoted content has been removed
哈哈,看来你我心有灵犀呀😇🤩
哈哈,看来你我心有灵犀呀😇🤩
CZ
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Keep Your Crypto #SAFU (CZ's Tips)
Updated: 2025-02-24 Original: 2020-02-25
The lack of security awareness among crypto users is painful to watch. It’s equally painful to see experts recommend advanced setups that are hard to follow and easy to screw up. 
Security is a broad topic. I am by no means an expert, but I have witnessed many of the security issues. I will try my best to use layman’s terms to explain:
Why and how you may, or may not, want to store coins yourselfWhy and how you may, or may not, want to store coins on a centralized exchange
First, nothing is 100% secure. Software has bugs, and people can be socially engineered. The real question is, is it “safe enough?”
If you store $200 in your wallet, you probably don’t need ultra-high security. A mobile wallet will do. If you store your life’s savings, you want stronger security.
To secure your coins, you just need to do the following 3 things:
Prevent others from stealing.Prevent yourself from losing it.Have a way to pass them to your loved ones in the event that you become unavailable.
Simple, right?

Why You May Or May Not Want To Store Coins Yourself

Your keys, your funds. Or is it?
Many crypto experts swear that crypto is only safe if you hold it yourself, never considering how technical you are. Is this really the best advice for you?
A bitcoin private key looks like this: KxBacM22hLi3o8W8nQFk6gpWZ6c3C2N9VAr1e3buYGpBVNZaft2p
That’s it. Whoever has a copy of it can move bitcoins on that address, if any.
To secure your crypto, you need to:
Prevent others from obtaining (a copy of) your private keys; preventing hackers, securing your computers from viruses, the internet, etc.Prevent yourself from losing your private keys; have backups to prevent loss or damaged devices, and secure those backups.Have a way to pass your private keys to your loved ones in the event of a death. It’s not a pleasant scenario to consider, but as responsible adults to our loved ones, we must manage that risk.

Prevent Hackers
You have heard about hackers. They use viruses, trojan horses, and other malware. You don’t want any of these near your devices.
To achieve that with a decent degree of confidence, your crypto wallet device should never connect to the internet. And you should never download any files to that device. So, how do you use a device like that?
Let’s talk about the different devices you could use.
A computer is an obvious choice, and often the most versatile in terms of coins supported. You should never connect that computer to the internet, or any network at all. If you connect it to a network, a hacker could get into your device by exploiting a bug in the Operating System or some software you use. Software is never bug-free.
So, how do you install software? You use a USB stick. Make sure it is clean. Use at least 3 different anti-virus software to scan the hell out of it. Download the software (OS and wallet) you wish to install to the USB stick. Wait for 72 hours. Check the news to make sure the website or the software is not compromised. There have been cases where official websites get hacked and the download package is replaced with a Trojan horse. You should only download software from official sites. You should only use open-source software, to reduce the chances of back-doors. Even if you are not a coder yourself, open-source software is looked at by other coders and has a lower chance of having back doors. This means you should use a stable version of Linux (not Windows or Mac) for your operating system, and only use open-source wallet software.
Once everything is installed, you use a clean USB stick to sign your transactions offline. This process varies by wallet and is outside the scope of this article. Aside from Bitcoin, many coins don’t have wallets that can do offline signing.
You need to ensure the physical security of the device. If someone steals it from you, they could access it physically. Make sure your disk is strongly encrypted so that even if someone gets a hold of it, they will not be able to read it. Different operating systems offer different encryption tools. Again, a disk encryption tutorial is out of the scope of this article; there are plenty of those online.
If you can do the above well, you can do your own secure backup and don’t need to read the rest of this article. If the above doesn’t sound like your cup of tea, then there are other options.
You could use a mobile phone. A non-rooted phone is generally more secure than a computer, due to the sandbox design of mobile operating systems. For most people, I recommend using an iPhone. If you are more technical, I recommend an Android phone with GrapheneOS. Again, you should use one phone just for your wallet, and not mix that with your everyday usage phone. You should only install the wallet software, and nothing else. You should keep the phone in airplane mode at all times except when using the wallet for transfers. I also recommend using a separate SIM card for the phone, and only using 5G to connect to the internet. Never connect to any WiFi. Connect to the internet only when you are using the phone for signing transactions and software updates. This is generally fine if you don’t hold super big amounts in your wallet.
A few mobile wallets offer offline signing of transactions (via QR code scanning) so that you can keep your phone offline completely, from the time you finish installing the wallet Apps and before you generate your private keys. This way, your private keys are never on a phone that’s connected to the internet. This will prevent if a wallet has a backdoor and sends data back to the developer, which has happened to multiple wallet Apps in the past, even official versions. You won’t be able to update your wallet Apps or OS. To do software updates, you use another phone, install the new version of the App on that, put that into airplane mode, generate a new address, back it up (see later), and then send funds to the new phone. Not so user-friendly. Also, these wallets support a limited number of coins/blockchains.
These wallet Apps usually do not support staking, yield farming, or aping meme coins. If you are into those, you will have to sacrifice security a bit.
You need to ensure the physical security of your phone. 
Hardware Wallets
You could use a hardware wallet. These devices are designed so that your private keys “never” leave the device, so your computer won’t have a copy of it. (Update as of 2025, the newer versions of Ledger can/will send your private keys to a server, for backup. So this is no longer true.) 
Hardware wallets have reported bugs in the firmware, software, etc. All hardware wallets require interaction with software running on a computer (or mobile phone) to work. You still want to make sure your computer is virus-free. There are viruses that switch your destination address to the hacker’s address at the last minute, etc. So, do verify the destination address on the device carefully. 
Hardware wallets prevent many basic types of exploits and are still a good choice if you wish to store coins independently. However, the weakest part of hardware wallets is often how you store the backups, which we will discuss in the next section.

Protect Against Yourself
You could lose the device or it could get damaged. So, you need backups.
There are many methods here too. Each has pros and cons. Fundamentally, you want to achieve multiple backups, in different geographic locations, that other people can’t see (encrypted).
You could write it down on a piece of paper. Some wallets using seeds advise this, as it is relatively easy to write down 12 or 24 English words. With private keys, you could easily make a mistake. Paper can also be lost among other pieces of paper, damaged in a fire or flood, or chewed by your dog. Others can easily read paper - no encryption.
Some people use bank vaults to store paper backups. I generally don’t recommend this option for the above reasons.
Don’t take a picture of the paper (or a screenshot), have it synced to the cloud, and think it is safely backed up. If a hacker hacks your email account or computer, they will find it easily. The cloud provider has many employees who could view it. 
There are metal tags explicitly designed to store a backup of seeds. These are supposed to be nearly indestructible, which mostly solves the problem of damage in a fire or flood. But, it doesn’t solve the problem of lost or easily read by others. Again, some people store these in bank vaults, usually together with their gold or other metal. If you use this approach, you should understand the risks.
I recommend using at least 3 USB sticks, but it requires more technical setup, the designed-for-experts fallacy.
There are shock, water, fire, and magnetic-resistant USB sticks. You could store encrypted versions of your private key backup on multiple of these USB sticks and in multiple locations (friends or relatives). This addresses all the requirements at the beginning of this section: multiple locations, not easily damaged or lost, and not easily readable by others. 
The key here is strong encryption. Many tools are available for this, and they evolve over time. VeraCrypt is an entry-level tool that provides a decent level of encryption. Do your own research and find the most up-to-date encryption tools for yourself. 
Take Care of Your Loved Ones
We don’t live forever. An inheritance plan is needed. In fact, crypto makes it easy for you to pass on your wealth to your heirs with less 3rd party intervention.
Again, there are a few ways to do this.
If you use the low-security approach of paper wallets or metal tags, you could simply share it with them. This has some potential drawbacks, of course. They may lack the proper means to hold or secure a copy of the backups, if they are young or non-technical. If they screw up on security, a hacker could easily steal your funds through them. Also, they could take your money away any time they wish. You may or may not want this, depending on your trust relationship with them.
I strongly advise against sharing keys between people, no matter the relationship. If the funds are stolen, it’s impossible to determine who moved them or who was hacked. It’s messy.
You could leave your paper wallet or metal tags in a bank vault or with a lawyer. But, as mentioned above, if any of the people involved get a copy of the keys, they can move the funds without much trace. This is different from lawyers having to go through a bank to move your bank account balance to your heirs.
If you use the USB stick approach mentioned above, there are ways to pass on your wealth more safely. Again, this requires a bit more setup.
There are online services called Deadman’s switches. They ping/email you once a while (say a month). You have to click a link or login to respond. If you don’t respond over a certain period of time, they assume you are a “deadman” and send any number of emails to your pre-specify recipients. I will not endorse or vouch for any of the services, you should google them and test it out for yourself. In fact, Google itself is a deadman’s switch. Deep in Google’s settings, is an option to let someone have access to your account if you don’t access it for 3 months. Personally, I have not tested it and can’t vouch for it. Do your own testing.
If you are thinking, “Oh great, I just put the private keys in the emails to my kids,” please reread this article from the beginning.
You may be thinking, "I could put the passwords I used to encrypt the USB sticks in those emails; this way, my kid or spouse can unlock them." This is getting closer, but it's still not good. You should not leave the passwords to your backups on a server on the Internet. It significantly weakens the security of your backups/funds.
If you are thinking, I could scramble/encrypt the emails that contain the passwords to the USB sticks with another password that I share with my loved ones, then you are on the right track. In fact, you don’t need the 2nd password. 
There is an old time-tested email encryption tool called PGP (or GPG) that you should use. PGP is one of the early tools that use asymmetric encryption (the same used in bitcoin). Again, I won’t include a full tutorial of PGP, there are plenty of them online. In summary, you should have your spouse and/or kid generate their own PGP private key, and you encrypt your deadman’s message to them using their public key, this way, only they can read the message contents and no one else. This method is relatively secure, but it requires that your loved ones know how to keep their PGP private key secure, and not lose them. And of course, they need to know how to use PGP email, which is somewhat technical in itself.
If you follow the recommendations shared thus far, then you have reached the basic (not advanced) level to store a meaningful amount of coins yourself. There are many other topics that we could discuss that may also address some of the issues mentioned so far, including multi-sig, threshold signatures, etc., but they belong to a more advanced guide. In the next part, we will look at:

Use Exchanges

When we say exchange in this article, we mean centralized exchanges that hold custody of your funds.
So, after reading the previous part, you may say, “darn, that’s a whole lot of trouble. Let me just store my coins on an exchange then.” Well, using an exchange isn’t risk-free either. While exchanges are responsible for keeping the funds and systems safe, you still need to follow proper practices to secure your account.
Only Use Big Reputable Exchanges
Yes, that’s easy for me to say, as Binance is one of the biggest exchanges in the world. However, there are some strong reasons for this. Not all exchanges are the same.
Big exchanges invest heavily in security infrastructure. Binance invests billions of dollars in security. It makes sense for our scale of business. Security touches so many different areas, from equipment, networks, procedures, personnel, risk monitoring, big data, AI detection, training, research, testing, 3rd party partners and even global law enforcement relationships. It takes a significant amount of money, people, and effort to ensure proper security. Smaller exchanges simply don’t have the scale or financial means to do this. I may get some heat for saying this, but this is the reason I often say, for most regular people, using a trusted centralized exchange is safer than holding coins on your own.
There is counterparty risk. Many smaller/new exchanges are exit scams from the beginning. They collect some deposits and run away with your funds. For this same reason, stay away from “non-profitable” exchanges or exchanges offering 0 fees, heavy rebates or other negative profit incentives. If their target isn’t business revenues, then your funds may very well be their only target. Proper security is expensive and requires funding from a sustainable business model. Don’t skimp on security when it comes to your funds. Large profitable exchanges have no motive to perform exit scams. When you already run a profitable and sustainable billion-dollar business, what incentives would you have to steal a few million and live in hiding and fear?
Big exchanges are also more tested on the security front. Yes, this is a risk as well. Hackers target big exchanges more. But, hackers also target smaller exchanges equally, and some of them are far easier targets. Big exchanges typically have 5-10 external security firms they engage on a rotating basis to perform penetration and security tests.
Binance goes a step further than most exchanges in terms of security. We invest heavily in big data and AI to fight hackers and scammers. We were able to prevent many users from losing their funds even when they got SIM swapped. Some users using multiple exchanges also reported that when their email accounts got hacked, funds from other exchanges they used were stolen, while funds on Binance were protected because our AI blocked the hackers’ attempts to withdraw their funds. Smaller exchanges couldn’t do this even if they wanted to, as they simply don’t have the big data. 
Securing Your Account
When using exchanges, it is still very important to secure your account. Let’s start with the basics.
Secure Your Computer
Again, your computer is often the weakest link in the security chain. To access your exchange account, use a dedicated computer. Install commercial anti-virus software on it (yes, please invest in security) and minimal other junk software. Turn on the firewall to the max.
Play your games, web surf, downloads, etc., on a different computer. Even on this computer, have the anti-virus and firewall running to the max. A virus on this computer will make it much easier for the hacker to access the other computers within the same network, so keep it clean.
Don’t Download
Even if you only use a CEX, I recommend you not download any files to your computer. If people send you a Word doc, ask them to send you a Google doc link instead. If they send you a PDF, open them in Google Drive in a browser, and not on your computer. If they send you a funny video, ask them to send you a link to it on an online platform. Yes, I know it’s a lot of trouble, but security isn’t free, and neither is losing your funds. View everything on the cloud.
Turn off “automatically save photos and videos” in your instant-messaging apps. Many of them download GIFs and videos by default, which is not a good security practice.
Keep up with Software Updates
I know all the OS updates are annoying, but they contain fixes for recently discovered security exploits. Hackers monitor these updates too and often will use those on the people who are lazy with updates. So, make sure you always apply the patches as soon as possible. Same goes for wallets and other software you use.
Secure Your Email
I recommend using Gmail or Protonmail. These two email providers are more secure than others, and we have seen a higher number of security breaches on other platforms.
I recommend setting up a unique email account for each exchange you use, making it hard to guess. This way, if another exchange breaches, your Binance account won’t be impacted. It will also reduce the number of phishing or targeted email scams you receive.
Protonmail has a feature called SimpleLogin that allows you to get a unique email address for each website you visit. I recommend using that if you don’t use another email forwarding service.
Turn on 2FA for your email service. I recommend using Yubikey for your email accounts. It is a strong way to prevent many types of hacks, including phishing sites, etc. More on 2FA later.
If you live in a country with reported SIM swap cases, don’t associate your phone number as a recovery method for your email account. We have seen many SIM swap victims having their email account passwords reset and hacked as a result. I don’t recommend binding phone numbers to email accounts anymore. Keep them separate.
Use a Password Manager
Use a strong and unique password for each site. Don’t bother trying to remember the passwords; use a password manager tool. For most people, Keeper or 1Password will probably do the trick. Both are well integrated into browsers, mobile phones, etc. Both claim to store passwords locally but sync across devices using only encrypted passwords. 
If you are more serious, then go for KeePass. It only stores information locally, so you don’t have to worry about your encrypted passwords in the cloud. It doesn’t sync across devices and has less mobile support. It is open-source, so you don’t have to worry about backdoors. 
Do your own research and choose a tool that fits you. But don’t try to “save time” here by using the simple, or worse same password everywhere. Make sure you use a strong password, otherwise, the time you save may cost you a lot in funds.
Even with all of these tools, you are toast if you have a virus on your computer. So, make sure you have good antivirus software running.
Enable 2FA
It is highly recommended that you enable 2FA (2 factor authentication) on your Binance account right after you sign up, or right now if you haven’t done so. As the 2FA code usually lives on your mobile phone, it can protect you to some extent against a compromised email and password.
2FA doesn’t protect you against everything, though. A virus on your computer that steals your email and password can also steal your 2FA code as you enter it by monitoring your keystrokes. You could interact with a phishing site, enter your email and password, and then enter your 2FA code on the fake site. The hacker then uses that to log in to your real account on Binance. There are many potential possibilities; we can’t list them all.
Set up U2F
U2F is a hardware device that generates unique, domain-specific, time-based code. Yubikey is the de facto device for this. 
U2F offers three big advantages. One, they are hardware-based so it’s almost impossible to steal the secret stored in the device. Two, they are domain-specific. This protects you even if you are inadvertently interacting with a phishing site. And they are easy to use. You just have to carry it with you.
For the above reasons, I advise you to bind a Yubikey to your Binance account. It offers one of the best protection against hackers.
You should also bind your Yubikey to your Gmail, Password Manager, and any other accounts to keep them safe.
Stop Using SMS Verification
There was a time when SMS verification was promoted, but times have changed. Given the increase in SIM swaps, we recommend you not use SMS anymore and rely more on 2FA or U2F described above.
Set up a Withdrawal Address Whitelist
We highly encourage you to use the Binance Whitelist feature for withdrawals. This feature allows fast withdrawals to your approved addresses and makes it much harder for hackers to add a new address to withdraw to.
Turn on the 24-hour wait period for new addresses added to whitelists. This way, if a hacker wants to add a new address, you will receive a 24-hour notice period. 
API Security
Many of our users use APIs for trading. Binance offers several different versions of APIs, with support for asymmetric encryption. This means Binance only needs your public key. You generate your private key in your environment and give the platform your public key. We use your public key to verify that the orders are yours, and we never have your private key. You must keep your private key safe.
You don’t necessarily have to backup your API key the same way you would when holding your coins. If you lose your API key in this case, you can always create a new one. You just gotta make sure no one else has a copy of your API keys.
Do not enable withdrawals for your API keys unless you really know what you are doing.
Complete L2 KYC
One of the best ways to keep your account safe is to complete the level 2 KYC. This way, we will know what you look like. When our big data risk engine detects anomalies with your account, we can use advanced automated video verifications.
This is also important for the “if you become unavailable” situation. Binance is able to help family members access the account of their deceased relatives, with proper verification.
Physically Secure Your Devices
Again, keep your phone secure. You probably have your email App, the Binance App, and your 2FA codes in it. Don’t root or jailbreak your phone. It significantly reduces its security. You should also keep your phone physically secure and have proper screen locks. The same goes for your other devices. 
Phishing
Beware of phishing attempts. These typically come in an email, text message, or social media post with a link to a fake site that looks like Binance. The site will invite you to enter your credentials, which the hackers will use to access your real Binance account.
Preventing phishing only requires diligence. Don’t click on links in emails or social media sites. Only access Binance by typing in the URL or using a bookmark. Don’t share your email with other parties. Don’t use the same email on other sites. Be careful when strangers (especially guys named CZ or similar) suddenly talk to you on Telegram, Instagram, etc.
If you stick to the above recommendations, your Binance account should be relatively secure.

So, which is better?
I generally recommend people use both centralized exchanges and their wallets. If you are not so tech-savvy, then I recommend a more significant portion on Binance and a spending wallet (TrustWallet) on your own. If you are technically strong, then adjust the portions.
Centralized exchanges occasionally go on maintenance, and if you need to make a transaction quickly, having a separate wallet available is handy.
If you follow the recommendations described here, you should be able to securely hold your funds, either by yourself or on a CEX like Binance.
Stay SAFU!
CZ
@CZ
@CZ
摸金校尉白东旭
--
只有币安再次强大这次牛市才可以正式开启。

接下来听我简单分析几个点。

①币安是全球第一大交易所
②CZ的三观和格局决定了他是币圈顶流。
③CZ的责任感使命感决定了币安现在的高度。
④CZ替所有币圈玩家抗下来所有,即使他如此优秀还是有很多U型锁的韭菜诋毁。(这些犟种我一个公式就可以解释了;坏人=蠢=傻=穷)
⑤CZ的币圈份额等于一半的加密玩家的身价。也只有他才能让加密有未来。
⑥CZ等于半个加密江山=大多数韭菜的未来=更多创业者的未来。
⑦CZ其实是一个很纯碎的人,你们别把他想的太复杂。他既然能做到全球顶流就能让币安链再次强大。
⑧只有自己强大,才能更好的掌舵,所以从多个方面来讲,只有大多数韭菜醒悟觉悟顿悟了才能知道真正金融看得是长期价值和扛跌效应。(可惜身价没有A8的人听不懂)
⑨只有更多的韭菜觉悟发现BNB才是最具有投资的,币安就能再次强大。更多的人就能在这里拿走属于自己真正的财富。
⑩以上九个点,你懂了你就属于真正进门的人。最后就是CZ是币圈的明灯。你如果看不清局势,等于你自己还是韭菜。(因为别的链没有未来。)

以上我不接受任何反驳。犟种反骨战神请绕道!!!
只有币安再次强大这次牛市才可以正式开启。 接下来听我简单分析几个点。 ①币安是全球第一大交易所 ②CZ的三观和格局决定了他是币圈顶流。 ③CZ的责任感使命感决定了币安现在的高度。 ④CZ替所有币圈玩家抗下来所有,即使他如此优秀还是有很多U型锁的韭菜诋毁。(这些犟种我一个公式就可以解释了;坏人=蠢=傻=穷) ⑤CZ的币圈份额等于一半的加密玩家的身价。也只有他才能让加密有未来。 ⑥CZ等于半个加密江山=大多数韭菜的未来=更多创业者的未来。 ⑦CZ其实是一个很纯碎的人,你们别把他想的太复杂。他既然能做到全球顶流就能让币安链再次强大。 ⑧只有自己强大,才能更好的掌舵,所以从多个方面来讲,只有大多数韭菜醒悟觉悟顿悟了才能知道真正金融看得是长期价值和扛跌效应。(可惜身价没有A8的人听不懂) ⑨只有更多的韭菜觉悟发现BNB才是最具有投资的,币安就能再次强大。更多的人就能在这里拿走属于自己真正的财富。 ⑩以上九个点,你懂了你就属于真正进门的人。最后就是CZ是币圈的明灯。你如果看不清局势,等于你自己还是韭菜。(因为别的链没有未来。) 以上我不接受任何反驳。犟种反骨战神请绕道!!!
只有币安再次强大这次牛市才可以正式开启。

接下来听我简单分析几个点。

①币安是全球第一大交易所
②CZ的三观和格局决定了他是币圈顶流。
③CZ的责任感使命感决定了币安现在的高度。
④CZ替所有币圈玩家抗下来所有,即使他如此优秀还是有很多U型锁的韭菜诋毁。(这些犟种我一个公式就可以解释了;坏人=蠢=傻=穷)
⑤CZ的币圈份额等于一半的加密玩家的身价。也只有他才能让加密有未来。
⑥CZ等于半个加密江山=大多数韭菜的未来=更多创业者的未来。
⑦CZ其实是一个很纯碎的人,你们别把他想的太复杂。他既然能做到全球顶流就能让币安链再次强大。
⑧只有自己强大,才能更好的掌舵,所以从多个方面来讲,只有大多数韭菜醒悟觉悟顿悟了才能知道真正金融看得是长期价值和扛跌效应。(可惜身价没有A8的人听不懂)
⑨只有更多的韭菜觉悟发现BNB才是最具有投资的,币安就能再次强大。更多的人就能在这里拿走属于自己真正的财富。
⑩以上九个点,你懂了你就属于真正进门的人。最后就是CZ是币圈的明灯。你如果看不清局势,等于你自己还是韭菜。(因为别的链没有未来。)

以上我不接受任何反驳。犟种反骨战神请绕道!!!
你猜的对。
你猜的对。
金刚老师
--
总感觉庄家一直想拉爆这单。
我再说一次。 抓紧布局币安智能链BSC链的一级市场。 未来一年币安为了重振老大的位置。他会不惜一切代价让土狗回归币安链。 醒醒吧10U战神。百U战神。 乱冲土狗的韭菜集合了,听我指挥。 速速回归币安链🙏
我再说一次。

抓紧布局币安智能链BSC链的一级市场。

未来一年币安为了重振老大的位置。他会不惜一切代价让土狗回归币安链。

醒醒吧10U战神。百U战神。
乱冲土狗的韭菜集合了,听我指挥。
速速回归币安链🙏
抓紧时间去找BSC链的一级市场。 如果牛市来了。那么我告诉大家。币安链机会还是要大过一切链上的土狗的。 这个逻辑很简单,谁的孩子谁宠。 如果你没有500W的筹码。那必须只有一级市场才能实现。不接受任何反驳。反骨战神请绕道🙏 透明契约概念就有一个很有潜力的。大家可以用AI去找到。
抓紧时间去找BSC链的一级市场。

如果牛市来了。那么我告诉大家。币安链机会还是要大过一切链上的土狗的。

这个逻辑很简单,谁的孩子谁宠。

如果你没有500W的筹码。那必须只有一级市场才能实现。不接受任何反驳。反骨战神请绕道🙏

透明契约概念就有一个很有潜力的。大家可以用AI去找到。
你的优秀在这里已经无法掩盖了🥳
你的优秀在这里已经无法掩盖了🥳
LUCIC封神之路
--
😍
2024年1年炒股赚了5万多
赶在牛市前,直接清仓梭哈币圈
2025年5万买BNB,5万买LUCIC
开启囤100个BNB的计划
不做合约,不搞模式、资本、名人币
持续更新,我们拭目以待吧💪
$BNB #牛回速归,晒晒你的持仓?
哈哈,我都说了,二级市场的傻子更多
哈哈,我都说了,二级市场的傻子更多
Quoted content has been removed
认知和知识是两码事! 能看懂你说的这句话的人按照数据来讲应该是10000比1
认知和知识是两码事!

能看懂你说的这句话的人按照数据来讲应该是10000比1
LUCICJack
--
你似乎懂得挺多币圈知识,但没有认知等于0️⃣
翻身必须一级市场,一级市场必须看露西LUCiC[发][发][发][发][yyds]
翻身必须一级市场,一级市场必须看露西LUCiC[发][发][发][发][yyds]
Quoted content has been removed
翻身改变命运还得是币圈。 币圈还得是玩一级市场。 一级市场唯有LUCiC!
翻身改变命运还得是币圈。
币圈还得是玩一级市场。
一级市场唯有LUCiC!
Quoted content has been removed
这次的跌是有预谋的。 因为我们中国该过年了,你们懂得。 所以呀,资本是知道怎么玩的。 2024总结,一级市场机会将变得更渺茫。但是好的MEME必须要有好的社区建设。如果一个Meme只靠名人效益,那么只有狠狠地🈹。二级市场的只要不碰HY,或许都还不伤身。如果没有做到一个长期投资主义者,那么结果就是亏,持续割持续亏。 2025年找我们的社区。好好学习币圈知识。 欢迎各路的韭菜围观。 2024再见(;一_一)2025祝刷到我的人都能A8A9A10 #市场回暖新机遇 #LUCiC
这次的跌是有预谋的。

因为我们中国该过年了,你们懂得。

所以呀,资本是知道怎么玩的。

2024总结,一级市场机会将变得更渺茫。但是好的MEME必须要有好的社区建设。如果一个Meme只靠名人效益,那么只有狠狠地🈹。二级市场的只要不碰HY,或许都还不伤身。如果没有做到一个长期投资主义者,那么结果就是亏,持续割持续亏。

2025年找我们的社区。好好学习币圈知识。

欢迎各路的韭菜围观。

2024再见(;一_一)2025祝刷到我的人都能A8A9A10
#市场回暖新机遇 #LUCiC
不错哟
不错哟
币爱响
--
lucic一级市场真正的做事的DEFI金融,10000个一级市场的币最多三个能上币安交易所所。所以难肯定难但是只要不是为了割韭菜而是为了拯救韭菜它就一定会成功到达币安的。
优秀
优秀
Square-Creator-92e686068
--
LUCIC必胜!
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