| Name | Related DEX | Address | Token Price (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| MTL / USDC | uniswap_v2 | 0x1fa0...c983 | 0.228203958774445 |
| MTL / WETH 1% | uniswap_v3 | 0xf042...0dae | 0.226719894811136 |
| MTL / ETH 0.3% | uniswap-v4-ethereum | 0x7bd3...f316 | 0.2624947998 |
| MTL / USDT | uniswap_v2 | 0xd873...670e | 1.46349162753552 |
| MTL / WETH 0.3% | uniswap_v3 | 0xf8ec...54ac | 0.3346083001 |
| MTL / XPR | uniswap_v2 | 0x6c78...a9f8 | 1.40587063403757 |
| MTL / WETH | uniswap_v2 | 0x3293...feec | 1.35743253162847 |
| USDC / MTL 1% | uniswap-v4-ethereum | 0xbe8a...5bff | 0.7748136484 |
Generally, a honeypot Detector operation consists of a computer, applications and data that simulate the behavior of a real system that would be attractive to attackers, such as a financial system, internet of things (IoT) devices, or a public utility or transportation network. It appears as part of a network but is actually isolated and closely monitored. Because there is no reason for legitimate users to access a honeypot, any attempts to communicate with it are considered hostile.