Just one wrong move, like clicking on a malicious link or ignoring critical news, can have very negative consequences.
I like the way you saliently identified that clicking on links erroneously could jeopardize our wallet safety. Consequently, scammers will continue to get people through that means because of greed. How do we justify someone clicking on a link where they've been promised to claim something they never applied for or bought? Even if it's an airdrop, at least the claimer applied for it in the first place or used a service affiliated to the project distributing the airdrop. Greed is a killer. If anyone can steer clear of it in this space it would be difficult for them to get hacked or scammed.
Also, the right information can lead to significant gains or safeguard your holdings.
...it can also lead to losses. We shouldn't forget that. Everything about right information isn't right all the time, paradoxically writing. At one time, I was an early investor with a project whose developer meant well for the project and the community he had. Sadly, things didn't go the way he had planned. The token later flopped after several months of the dev trying to steady it. That was the end of it. Many people accused the dev of abandoning the project but that was never his intention. The same thing goes with many other projects. Those who got information (good one at that) on how good and great that project was going to be must've lost out too on their investment.