Wu said that WLFI stated that in the past few days, a total of 272 wallet addresses have been blacklisted, which accounts for a very small proportion of total holders. The purpose is to prevent asset theft and assist users in regaining control. Among them, 215 addresses are related to phishing attacks, and WLFI claims to have intervened in advance to prevent hackers from transferring funds; 50 addresses were actively reported by users requesting to freeze after being stolen; 5 were temporarily reviewed due to high-risk exposure; and 1 is under internal investigation for suspected misappropriation of others' assets. WLFI emphasizes that there will be no bans due to normal trading behavior, and reviews are based solely on on-chain security signals, with results to be publicly disclosed after the review is completed.