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#比特币市场表现 When I saw this case, I truly realized why so many people stumble in the crypto world. It's not because of market volatility, but because of human nature.
$487,000 worth of Bitcoin can bribe an exchange employee, and $33,500 can buy off a military officer. These aren't astonishing numbers, but they are enough to lead to devastating decisions. The key question is—these people are not novices in the crypto space. One works at an exchange and should be well aware of the risks; the other is an active military officer who should understand the consequences.
But they still chose the money.
This makes me think of those seemingly tempting projects on the blockchain. Promises of high returns and quick wealth are essentially the same logic used to lure people. The only difference is scale. Some manipulators use tokens as "bribery," and social consensus as "cover," with the same effect as this case—first giving you a taste of sweetness, then making you act against reason.
I've seen too many people start believing a project is the "future" after just one or two gains, only to buy in at the high. They're not stupid; it's just that at that moment, greed overrides judgment.
The most heartbreaking part is that while this Korean case is used as a warning, the crypto world is playing the same script every day. Regulations will tighten, but human nature won't change. So my current principle is simple: any promise of super high returns—ask yourself first—why am I smarter than others? If you can't answer, walk away.
Living longer is more valuable than making quick money.