One of the biggest misconceptions about DeFi is that risk comes from volatility.
In reality, most risk comes from not knowing what you’re interacting with.
Because anyone can deploy a token.
STON.fi takes an interesting approach to this problem:
They don’t restrict the market — they label it.
Here’s what that means in practice:
Instead of hiding tokens, the interface flags them based on behavior and signals:
→ Fake tokens (imitation assets)
→ Honeypots (buy-only traps)
→ Taxable tokens (hidden fees)
→ Suspicious tokens (unclear intent)
→ DMCA Notice tokens (legal/IP issues)
But the real design shift is this:
⚠️ You can’t casually stumble into these tokens.
Most labeled assets only appear if you manually enter the contract address.
That small friction changes everything:
It turns accidental interaction into a deliberate choice.
Some tokens (Fake, Honeypot) are completely blocked from swaps.
Others remain tradable — but with visible warnings.
So instead of controlling what exists on-chain, STON.fi focuses on:
👉 Making users aware before they act
In DeFi, you can’t remove risk entirely.
But you can make it visible.
And that’s where smarter interfaces win.
#STONfi $TON