It’s funny how X is absolutely flooded with warnings about rugs, scams, and insider dumps…
…but you almost never see anyone pointing out what’s actually safe.
The real safe standard is simple:
supply + liquidity permanently fused into a PDA-owned pool from launch.
No private key exists.
No admin controls.
No withdrawal or rug possible — ever.
Security stops being “trust the team” and becomes mathematically immutable code.
Tech-wise Solana is still unmatched — fastest settlement, lowest fees, and the only chain where DeFi + memecoins actually scale together.
But the endless scams are exhausting. Every cycle the same story: rugs, insiders dumping, bundles sniping retail.
Pump. fun’s core idea isn’t bad — fair launches and community-driven coins are healthy.
The problem is the setup: open team wallets, removable liquidity, and zero on-chain guarantees make rug pulls trivial.
We don’t need to kill the fun.
We need setups where the game literally can’t be rigged.
$ACKE shows what that looks like:
95% of supply + liquidity permanently fused into a PDA-owned Raydium CLMM since September 2024.
No private key. No bundles. No liquidity removal. No insider exit — ever.
Liquidity is the asset.
Code is the only owner.
Solana doesn’t need fewer memes.
It needs memes that can’t be rugged.
Governed by code. Not by people.
It’s funny — and telling — how even after showing a genuinely un-ruggable memecoin with 95% of supply + liquidity permanently fused in a PDA-owned Raydium CLMM since September 2024, there have been essentially zero organic buys.
The pattern is clear: the only coins that actually move are the ones self-pumped and shilled by KOLs.
Real organic conviction feels doomed from the start in this meta.
That’s precisely why $ACKE was built the way it is — a setup where the game literally cannot be rigged, whether the crowd notices immediately or not.
Liquidity is the asset.
Code is the only owner.
Governed by code. Not by people
Sadly, in 2026 the only way any memecoin earns real trust is by completely removing team and insider exploits.
No shill, no dev, no narrative changes that fact — they all end the same.
$ACKE actually did it:
95% of supply + liquidity permanently fused into a PDA-guarded Raydium CLMM pool.
No private key. No admin access. No rugs — ever.
Liquidity is the asset.
Code is the only owner.
This is how you rebuild trust in memecoins.
Governed by code. Not by people.
https://t.co/FoRpZPATEu
After the Drift incident reminded everyone why resilient onchain markets matter…
The real next leap isn’t more audits.
It’s removing humans entirely.
ACKE already did it:
95% supply + liquidity permanently fused into a PDA-owned Raydium CLMM.
No private key. No team. No rug possible - ever.
Liquidity is the asset.
Code is the only owner.
This is what true DeFi security looks like.
Governed by code. Not by people.
https://t.co/FoRpZPATEu
The future is already live
Clarification: "Deleted" Wallets Are Still Fully Auditable
The public announcement stated: "As soon as I started my audit, they began closing Solana accounts to scrub their tracks."
On Solana, closing a token account reclaims the rent-exempt SOL deposit and removes the account's current state from the active ledger.
However, every transaction that account ever participated in remains permanently recorded in the blockchain's transaction history.
Closing an account does not "scrub tracks", it is a routine operation that token holders perform regularly to reclaim SOL from unused token accounts.
The complete history of any closed account can be reconstructed using getSignaturesForAddress, which returns every transaction signature associated with that address regardless of whether the account is currently open or closed.
Each transaction can then be examined in full detail using getTransaction.
If these wallets held the assets claimed by the investigation, the on-chain record will show it. If they never held those assets, the record will show that too.
Either way, the data is permanent and publicly accessible.
Verification: Run getSignaturesForAddress on any of the wallet addresses listed in Section 11 of the report to retrieve the complete transaction history.
An on-chain verification of the claims made in the March 30 $CRM security announcement has been published.
All wallet addresses and verification scripts are included so anyone can check the findings themselves: https://t.co/I8ZLHeK5YN