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#Flow网络安全事故 The recent security incident at Flow indeed prompts deep reflection. A $3.9 million vulnerability, a halved token price, network isolation—on the surface, it looks quite dangerous, but behind it all, it exposes the maturity level of crisis management in the Web3 ecosystem.
The most important aspect to focus on is not how sophisticated the hackers' techniques are, but the subsequent governance battles. The initial rollback plan from the official team sounded "decisive," but once opposition from cross-chain bridge partners emerged, the problem became clear—users operating through deBridge, LayerZero, and other normal channels will become innocent casualties. This is a typical flaw of centralized decision-making.
Fortunately, Flow ultimately chose to abandon the rollback and instead adopted an isolation recovery plan. What does this shift signify? **The power of Web3 lies here**—when enough ecosystem partners and community voices come together, even foundations have to reconsider. This is true decentralized governance in action.
Technology will always have vulnerabilities, but the resilience of an ecosystem depends on how it responds to crises. Although Flow was hurt this time, it proved through action that it is listening. For the entire Web3 space, this is a process of continuous improvement and evolution. Challenges contain the seeds of a stronger future.