Qwerti adds pre‑trade high‑risk token detection
- Qwerti, a DeFi aggregation platform, was cited in a May 23 X post as adding real-time checks for high-risk tokens and smart contracts before trades. - Counselor_Ayo’s May 23 post said the feature can flag “high-risk” tokens or contracts pre-trade and either block activity or trigger alerts. - Qwerti’s public docs describe swaps, widgets and routing layers; the company has not publicly detailed this feature elsewhere.
Qwerti was described in a May 23 X post as adding pre-trade detection for high-risk tokens and smart contracts, a feature aimed at screening transactions before execution. The post, published by Counselor_Ayo, said the system works in real time and can either block activity or issue alerts when a token or contract is classified as high risk. Qwerti’s own public documentation identifies the company as a non-custodial DeFi aggregator that routes transactions across chains and providers, but does not appear to separately document the new detection feature. ### What, exactly, was claimed in the May 23 post? Counselor_Ayo’s May 23 post said Qwerti had added “real-time” detection for high-risk tokens and smart contracts before trades. The description said the feature is meant to identify risky assets or contract interactions before a user submits or completes a swap. The post further said the system can either block the trade path or generate an alert, depending on how it is configured. The same post said the detection layer can integrate with EDR/XDR systems and trading platforms. (docs.qwerti.ai) ### What is Qwerti’s product today? Qwerti’s documentation describes the platform as a non-custodial DeFi aggregator. The company says it helps users route and execute transactions across different chains and providers, while wallet infrastructure and key management are handled by the underlying wallet provider. Its swaps documentation says Qwerti finds routes through providers including Jupiter, Relay, 1inch and OKX, then builds the transaction flow for the user to confirm. (docs.qwerti.ai) Qwerti’s website and docs also describe an embeddable widget and “Magic Link” product for projects and creators. Those materials say the platform is designed to simplify token purchases and swaps across chains and devices, including flows that start from fiat on-ramp providers. ### Why would pre-trade token screening matter on a DeFi aggregator? Qwerti says it supports many chains and millions of tokens, and its token-data page warns that crypto assets, especially new or low-cap tokens, carry significant risk. (docs.qwerti.ai) In that setting, a pre-trade screening layer would sit before execution rather than after settlement, allowing the platform to warn users or stop an attempted interaction before funds move. That is an inference from how Qwerti says its routing and swap flows work, not a separately published company explanation of the feature. (docs.qwerti.ai) Independent token-risk products already market similar functions. Token Sniffer says it scans fungible tokens for scam risks, while De.Fi says its scanner checks for threats and vulnerabilities before users invest. Those products are separate from Qwerti, but they show an existing market for pre-trade token and contract risk checks. ### What is still unverified? Qwerti’s public docs, website snippets and Linktree confirm the company operates a DeFi aggregation product, but they do not, in the material surfaced here, provide a standalone product note, changelog entry or technical specification for the May 23 detection claim. (docs.qwerti.ai) The description of blocking, alerting and EDR/XDR integration is therefore attributable to Counselor_Ayo’s post unless Qwerti publishes its own documentation or statement. (tokensniffer.com) Qwerti’s API and SDK page also says “Coming soon,” which leaves open how any external integration would be delivered in practice. Public materials reviewed here do not specify supported EDR/XDR vendors, supported chains for the detection layer, risk-scoring criteria, or whether the feature is live for all users or limited to partners. ### Where would readers look next for confirmation? (linktr.ee) Qwerti’s documentation hub, app pages and official social accounts are the most likely places for a product note or rollout detail if the company expands on the May 23 claim. The company’s docs already cover swaps, security, widgets and token flows, and its Linktree points users to its app, documentation and X account. (docs.qwerti.ai) As of May 24, the clearest public description remains the May 23 Counselor_Ayo post, alongside Qwerti’s existing documentation describing the platform’s routing, swap and widget infrastructure. (docs.qwerti.ai)