Airdrop season is back again, and the task platform is busy “hunting witches” so that everyone feels like they’re clocking in at work… But the more competitive it gets, the more I want to move more slowly—first, I want to see whether the project is actually reliable. For beginners, reading “credibility” should come first. I think you shouldn’t just stare at K-line charts; look through three things instead: GitHub isn’t about star counts—it’s about whether there have been normal updates recently and whether the bug-fix cadence looks like real work; audit reports shouldn’t only be about “passed”—focus on whether high-risk issues have been fixed, and whether “known risks are left as is”; and also, upgrade permissions—especially multi-signature. You might not be able to make sense of who the signers are, but at least check whether the threshold is high enough and whether someone can casually change the contract. Bottom line: none of this guarantees safety, but it can reduce reliance on “pure belief” by just a little—when I place orders, I feel a bit more at ease too.

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