Signal methodology
How RFS alerts work
Red Flag Sentinel monitors observable Solana token signals, records what changes, and filters noise before interrupting you.
RFS reports observations, not predictions. No guarantees. Not financial advice.
What RFS monitors today
Four active signal monitors run continuously against watched Solana tokens.
Mint Authority Revoked
- What RFS observes
- RFS checks whether the token's mint authority is revoked.
- Why it matters
- Mint authority relates to whether additional tokens can potentially be minted through that authority.
- What can trigger a recorded signal
- RFS records this when it observes that mint authority is revoked.
- When an email may be sent
- If this is an initial observation when monitoring begins, RFS records it in history and may not send an email. If the state changes after monitoring began, RFS may send an email.
- What it does NOT mean
- It does not mean the token is safe.
- It does not guarantee anything.
- It does not predict price movement.
- It does not confirm malicious or honest intent.
Freeze Authority Revoked
- What RFS observes
- RFS checks whether the token's freeze authority is revoked.
- Why it matters
- Freeze authority relates to whether token accounts can be frozen through that authority.
- What can trigger a recorded signal
- RFS records this when it observes that freeze authority is revoked.
- When an email may be sent
- Initial observations may be recorded without email. Transitions observed after monitoring began may generate an email.
- What it does NOT mean
- It does not guarantee the token is safe.
- It does not rule out every possible restriction or risk.
- It does not confirm intent.
Liquidity Change Detected
- What RFS observes
- RFS monitors observed liquidity for watched tokens using external liquidity data.
- Why it matters
- Large liquidity changes can affect a trader's ability to enter or exit positions and may be an important risk signal.
- What can trigger a recorded signal
- RFS looks for meaningful liquidity decreases and applies filtering before sending alerts.
- Filtering applied
- Tiny movements are ignored.
- Zero-to-zero liquidity does not trigger alerts.
- Liquidity increases are not treated as liquidity removals.
- Very large drops may require confirmation before email.
- Cooldowns help reduce repeated notifications.
- When an email may be sent
- Meaningful confirmed liquidity decreases may send an email. Noisy, tiny, zero-liquidity, or unconfirmed artifact-like cases may be skipped or recorded without interruption.
- What it does NOT mean
- It is an observed signal, not a conclusion.
- It does not prove malicious intent.
- It does not guarantee the liquidity data source is complete.
Supply Change Detected
- What RFS observes
- RFS monitors meaningful total token supply changes since RFS began monitoring a token.
- Why it matters
- A supply increase may indicate that more tokens were issued through the mint authority. A supply decrease may indicate a burn or supply reduction. RFS reports the observed change without interpreting intent.
- What can trigger a recorded signal
- RFS records supply changes above the configured meaningful threshold, measured against the baseline captured when monitoring began.
- Filtering applied
- Baseline initialization does not send an email.
- Per-mint and per-user cooldowns reduce repeated notifications.
- When an email may be sent
- Supply increases may send an email depending on severity. Supply decreases are initially recorded in history without email.
- What it does NOT mean
- It does not prove manipulation.
- It does not predict price movement.
- It does not tell the user to buy or sell.
Why RFS does not email every observation
RFS is designed to reduce noise.
- Some signals are recorded in history but not emailed.
- Initial observations may be recorded without interrupting you.
- Cooldowns prevent repeated emails for the same signal on the same token.
- Some events require confirmation before email.
More emails does not always mean more protection. RFS is designed to preserve attention for changes that appear meaningful.
Alert history
Everything RFS observed and recorded for your watched tokens — including signals that did not meet the notification policy for email.
Email alerts
A user interruption reserved for signals that pass RFS notification policy — cooldowns, confirmation, and materiality applied.
What you are paying for
Sentinel Beta is designed for users who want RFS to watch more tokens, keep a longer alert history, and notify them when meaningful changes deserve attention.
- Continuous monitoring
- Structured signal history
- Noise-filtered email alerts
- Fewer manual checks
- Clearer context around token risk changes
You are not paying for predictions. You are paying for attention-aware monitoring of observable signals.
Red Flag Sentinel is not financial advice.
RFS does not guarantee safety.
RFS does not confirm scams or rugs.
Always do your own research.
