| Name | Related DEX | Address | Token Price (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| USDT / GVNR | carbon-defi-ethereum | 0xc537...1915 | 0.4015189888 |
| BNT / GVNR | carbon-defi-ethereum | 0xc537...1917 | 0.2010510805 |
| GVNR / ETH 70% | uniswap-v4-ethereum | 0x68e1...5295 | 0.739497617 |
| USDT / GVNR 1% | uniswap-v4-ethereum | 0x1725...63be | 1.5055996101 |
| USDC / GVNR | carbon-defi-ethereum | 0xc537...1896 | 0.2252218048 |
| USDT / GVNR 65% | uniswap-v4-ethereum | 0x3858...4fd3 | 0.08291217017 |
| USDC / GVNR 85.5% | uniswap-v4-ethereum | 0x146a...f676 | 0.03961822961 |
| USDC / GVNR 88% | uniswap-v4-ethereum | 0x841d...4585 | 0.03754895209 |
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.