I learned that in DeFi, one wrong link can mess up a good decision before anything even starts. It sounds simple, but this is exactly where people slip. The page looks clean. The button works. The transaction feels normal. So you relax. I have done that before too. Then later you realize the real question was not only what product you used, but whether you were even using the right source. That is why I check docs more seriously now. With @Bedrock , one thing I like is that its official docs say all Bedrock smart contracts are open sourced on GitHub. Its Terms also mention open-source licences like MIT License and GNU General Public License v3.0. That matters because users should not have to trust only a nice-looking interface. Developers, auditors, and careful users need a place to check the logic and compare references. The good side is clear. Open-source contracts make verification easier. But it is not a magic shield, Most users will never read the code. Some will still click random links, trust copied contract addresses, or rush because the page “looks right.” So the safer habit is simple: use official docs, check references, avoid random links, and treat code visibility as one trust signal, not full protection. Because in DeFi, risk does not always start after you enter. Sometimes it starts with the link you choose.
@Bedrock $BR #Bedrock #BTCFi $EVAA $OPG