Many times, you have to struggle between two choices: using convenient tools or managing your assets yourself. In most cases, it's indeed a trade-off that can't be both.
But after a major exchange launched the Smart Account, a new possibility emerged. This type of smart account design breaks the dilemma of choosing one over the other. You can enjoy the convenience of professional tools while still maintaining control over your assets. This kind of compromise is quite attractive to many people.
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AirdropHunterXiao
· 01-11 06:45
This Smart Account sounds good, but to be honest, I'm still a bit worried. What if something happens again one day?
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TokenTaxonomist
· 01-10 05:56
actually, let me pull up my spreadsheet on this one... the math on "not fully giving up control" doesn't quite check out taxonomically. still custodial under different nomenclature imo
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MemeKingNFT
· 01-09 21:33
Hmm... this Smart Account sounds pretty good, but I'm still a bit unsure. What happened to those "both-and" plans before?
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LiquidationAlert
· 01-08 16:59
Someone finally figured this out: self-custody and usability don't necessarily have to be mutually exclusive.
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MetaLord420
· 01-08 16:56
Sounds good, finally someone thought of this. It was really frustrating before—either being controlled by the exchange or exhausting yourself managing your own funds. Is Smart Account reliable? Has anyone used it?
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GasFeeCrier
· 01-08 16:50
Someone finally explained this clearly; it was indeed a dead end before.
Really? You can still self-custody like this? Let's try it first.
The compromise solution sounds good, but it depends on how it works in practice.
Smart accounts, at the core, are still a trust issue, right?
Can you have both the fish and the bear's paw? Then all my previous concerns were unnecessary.
Wait, is this just another hype?
I'm quite interested in trying it, but it's better to be cautious.
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TokenDustCollector
· 01-08 16:48
This Smart Account sounds good, but can you really trust it? Or do you have to run the code yourself to believe it?
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LoneValidator
· 01-08 16:42
Sounds good, but it still depends on how it's actually used... I'm a bit worried about whether this kind of "fish and bear's paw" thing can truly be balanced.
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DegenRecoveryGroup
· 01-08 16:33
Uh... is the smart account really reliable? I'm still a bit hesitant to put all my assets into it.
This time, I finally don't have to choose between self-custody and convenience; I still need to give it a try.
The smart account sounds good, but I'm worried it might become the next target for attacks.
It's not that I don't trust it, but I've been hacked too many times before.
The compromise sounds appealing, but in practice, will it cause all sorts of fragmentation?
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GhostAddressMiner
· 01-08 16:31
Listen to this: "Not completely giving up control"... which means you are still giving up, just a matter of degree. I have scanned the smart contract code on the exchange side, and there are more backdoors than you think.
Many times, you have to struggle between two choices: using convenient tools or managing your assets yourself. In most cases, it's indeed a trade-off that can't be both.
But after a major exchange launched the Smart Account, a new possibility emerged. This type of smart account design breaks the dilemma of choosing one over the other. You can enjoy the convenience of professional tools while still maintaining control over your assets. This kind of compromise is quite attractive to many people.