A few days ago, I helped Akai debug ecological tools for DeFi. He frowned at the multi-chain wallet interface: "Connecting to DApps on Ethereum, BSC, and Polygon simultaneously requires separate authorizations for each. I accidentally granted transfer permissions to a strange contract, and now I don't even know where to start to revoke it."

This reminded me of a set of data in an industry report: last year, asset losses due to multi-chain authorization confusion exceeded $1.2 billion, and 70% of users stated that they "cannot distinguish between authorization permissions on different chains." The traditional isolated model of single-chain wallets has become a security weakness.

Later, I had Akai try Wallet Connect. He used a unified interface to connect applications on five chains. During testing last week, a suspicious DApp attempted to invoke cross-chain transfer permissions. The system not only marked the risk level in real-time but also displayed all authorization records from all chains on a single interface, allowing for one-click bulk revocation of redundant permissions. "This cross-chain permission aggregation is really impressive," he pointed to the on-chain data and said, "Based on a decentralized messaging transmission protocol, it can not only accommodate the underlying standards of different public chains but also ensure that authorization instructions are not tampered with through off-chain signing and on-chain verification, making it much safer and more efficient than switching wallets back and forth."

Now, Akai's DeFi portfolio strategy relies entirely on it. Last month, during market fluctuations, he adjusted permissions across three chains within 10 minutes, avoiding potential liquidation risks. "In the past, just remembering the authorization statuses of different chains was a headache; now it's all managed on one interface." #WalletConnect

In fact, those who engage in crypto understand that convenience and security are never an either/or choice. Wallet Connect didn’t shout any slogan like "full-chain security"; it simply uses a standardized cross-chain communication protocol to turn multi-chain authorization from a "chaotic maze" into something "transparent and controllable." This sense of professionalism is more substantial than any gimmick. @WalletConnect $WCT