
I’ve been studying market scams and manipulation alongside basic risk management, and this case makes me realize how easily “news” can be weaponized. The idea that someone can hack a forum account or spoof a company website and trigger a big price jump is scary, because as a beginner I’m naturally drawn to catalysts and fast movers. What I’m learning is that the fastest moves are often the most dangerous, especially around acquisitions, clinical data, and press releases, because the first headline can be wrong, or even planted. So instead of chasing, I’m building a simple rule set: wait for confirmation from official filings or multiple reputable outlets, size smaller when volatility is headline-driven, and avoid trades where the only justification is a rumor screenshot or a link I can’t authenticate. My takeaway is straightforward: if the “edge” depends on secrets, urgency, or unverifiable information, it’s not an opportunity, it’s a trap.
면책 조항: 본 게시글에 표현된 견해는 전적으로 작성자의 견해이며 Followme의 공식 입장을 대변하지 않습니다. Followme는 제공된 정보의 정확성, 완전성 또는 신뢰성에 대해 책임을 지지 않으며, 서면으로 명시적으로 언급되지 않는 한 해당 내용을 기반으로 취해진 어떠한 조치에 대해서도 책임을 지지 않습니다.

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