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FOUR

Four Prijs

FOUR
#15684

$0,001062

0%

฿0,00000002

Marktkapitalisatie
-
FDV
$8,5K
Volume 24u
$13,49
Vol/Mkt Cap 24u
-
Totale voorraad
8,000,000
Circulerende voorraad
8,000,000

Contracten

Contract

0x343...e44e

GEMEENSCHAP

Verkenners

Prijsverandering

24h

Laag

Hoog

1h Verandering

0%

24h Verandering

0%

7d Verandering

0%

Hoogste Punt Ooit

$0,01

Oct 12, 2025

92,26%

Laagste Punt Ooit

$0

Feb 24, 2026

8,72%

Four prijs is $0,001062, omlaag NaN% in de laatste 24 uur, en de live marktkapitalisatie is $0. Het heeft een circulerende voorraad van 8,000,000 FOUR munten en een maximale voorraad van 8,000,000 FOUR naast $13,49 24u handelsvolume.

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Centralized Burn

Dev can delete your tokens

high
Selfdestruct

Token can delete itself and your money

high
Centralized Mint

Dev can print new tokens anytime

high
Transfer Event Amount Mismatch

What you see isn’t what was sent

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Reddit ...

Getting Banned From Hyperliquid With No Explanation Shows Why Decentralized Platforms Still Have Centralized Chokepoints

<!-- SC_OFF --><div class="md"><p>A trader just got banned from Hyperliquid after months of organic activity and $750,000 in volume. Main wallet suddenly flagged as “high risk” by third-party screening tool. Cannot connect to the frontend anymore. When they asked for explanation on Discord, they got timed out for a week instead of clarity.</p> <p>This is the uncomfortable reality of “decentralized” platforms in 2026. The smart contracts are permissionless. The underlying protocol is decentralized. But access to the frontend is controlled by centralized entities who can revoke it based on opaque third-party risk scoring with no appeals process.</p> <p>The specific details matter here. This was not someone with suspicious activity or clear violations. Four to five year old wallet, never flagged on any platform previously, $750K in legitimate trading volume over months. Not someone wash trading for airdrop farming or engaging in obvious manipulation. Just a regular trader using the platform as intended who suddenly cannot access it anymore.</p> <p>The problem is not that platforms need to manage risk or comply with regulations. The problem is the process. Third-party screening tool flags wallet. User loses access immediately. User asks for explanation. User gets silenced instead of given information about what triggered the flag or how to dispute it. This is not reasonable risk management, this is arbitrary exclusion without due process.</p> <p>What makes this particularly frustrating is that Hyperliquid’s value proposition is being a decentralized perpetuals exchange that does not have the restrictions and arbitrary rules of centralized platforms. But if access to the frontend can be revoked based on opaque risk scoring with no explanation or appeals, the practical difference from a centralized exchange is minimal for users who get caught in the filter.</p> <p>The user says they will keep trading using secondary addresses, which highlights how ineffective this kind of blocking actually is for risk management. Someone determined to access the platform just uses different wallets. The main effect is not preventing actual bad actors but creating friction and frustration for legitimate users who get caught in overly broad filters.</p> <p>This connects to broader questions about how decentralized platforms handle compliance and risk management without recreating the exact problems centralized platforms have. If the only way to comply with regulations or manage risk is through centralized frontend access control with opaque criteria and no appeals process, then calling the platform decentralized becomes misleading.</p> <p>Intent-based architectures like Anoma could help address this through different access models. Instead of binary frontend access where you are either allowed or banned, intent-based systems could implement graduated restrictions based on specific behaviors or risk signals. Low risk activity executes normally. Medium risk activity faces additional verification requirements. High risk activity gets flagged for review but does not lose all access immediately.</p> <p>More importantly, intent systems with validity predicates could encode compliance requirements directly at the protocol level rather than relying on frontend gatekeeping. If certain types of intents need to satisfy KYC or risk screening requirements, those become validity predicates that must be satisfied for execution. But the criteria are transparent and the verification happens programmatically rather than through arbitrary frontend bans.</p> <p>The transparency point is crucial. If your intent gets rejected because it does not satisfy a validity predicate, you know exactly which constraint was not satisfied. You can see the logic that determined rejection. You can potentially modify the intent to satisfy requirements. This is fundamentally different from “third-party tool flagged your wallet as high risk” with zero information about what that means or how to address it.</p> <p>The user in this case is left guessing. Did they interact with a flagged address at some point? Did volume patterns trigger some algorithmic filter? Did someone report the wallet maliciously? No way to know and no way to dispute because they get timed out instead of given information.</p> <p>This kind of opaque enforcement is what people expected from centralized exchanges, not from platforms marketing themselves as decentralized alternatives. The irony is that centralized exchanges often have better appeals processes than this because they have regulatory requirements to provide transparency about account actions.</p> <p>The broader lesson is that decentralization at the smart contract level is not sufficient if access remains controlled through centralized chokepoints with opaque enforcement. Frontend access, oracle data, cross-chain bridges, fiat on-ramps, all of these represent points where centralized control can effectively override protocol-level decentralization for most users.</p> <p>Solving this requires thinking about access control and compliance as architectural questions rather than operational questions. If compliance requirements can be encoded as validity predicates that execute programmatically with transparent logic, you get both compliance and fairness. If compliance happens through opaque third-party tools that flag wallets with no explanation, you get neither compliance nor fairness, just frustration.</p> <p>For Hyperliquid specifically, this is damaging to their positioning as a decentralized alternative to centralized perps platforms. The value proposition was supposed to be that you do not face arbitrary restrictions or opaque enforcement. But arbitrary bans with no explanation or appeals process directly contradict that value proposition.</p> <p>The user says they still support the product and will keep using it through other wallets. That loyalty is notable but the fact that the solution is “use different wallets to evade the ban” suggests the enforcement is not actually accomplishing whatever risk management goal it was intended to serve. It just creates friction for legitimate users while doing little to actually prevent determined bad actors.</p> <p>Curious whether others have experienced similar issues with platforms that market themselves as decentralized but maintain centralized control over access through frontend restrictions. Also interested in whether there are examples of platforms implementing compliance and risk management in ways that maintain transparency and fairness rather than relying on opaque third-party tools with no appeals process.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​</p> </div><!-- SC_ON -->   submitted by   <a href="https://www.reddit.com/user/Repulsive_Counter_79"> /u/Repulsive_Counter_79 </a> <br/> <span><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/CryptoCurrency/comments/1s7k0fy/getting_banned_from_hyperliquid_with_no/">[link]</a></span>   <span><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/CryptoCurrency/comments/1s7k0fy/getting_banned_from_hyperliquid_with_no/">[comments]</a></span>

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