Three specialized AI agents read a Solana program the way an attacker would — then a Scan Report goes public with a severity breakdown, a scan ID, and a timestamp. No "100% secure." No certificates. Just what was checked, and what was found.
Cost: 5,000,000 $AIOIL per scan, paid on Solana mainnet directly to the AIOil treasury. You'll be asked to approve the transfer in your wallet before the scan runs.
The order matters: structure has to be mapped before exploits can be hunted, and findings have to be hunted before they can be reviewed. Nothing here is decorative — it's the actual sequence a submission runs through.
Static analysis of the Rust/Anchor source: every instruction, every account constraint, every PDA — turned into a structural map the next agent can attack.
→Checks against known Solana failure patterns: missing signer checks, unchecked math, account substitution ("account cosplay"), Token-2022 decimal exploits.
→Drops false positives, ranks what's left by severity (Critical / High / Medium / Low), and formats the public Scan Report — hash, timestamp, agent version.
Security Shield pays for itself instead of taking outside money — every fee it earns is fed straight back into the ecosystem it protects.
A developer pastes Rust/Anchor code and pays a flat fee in $AIOil — no free preview, no partial results. The output is always a Scan Report: either the vulnerabilities we found, or the plain statement "no known vulnerabilities detected."
The Jupiter-powered swap hub takes a small fee in SOL on every trade. Tokens that pass a scan earn the "AIOil Scanned" badge next to the transparency lights already shown in the Market Hub.
Both fee streams are merged and burned into locked LP on a set schedule — deeper liquidity at zero extra cost, and no one can pull it back out.
An automated scan can reduce risk. It cannot promise safety. The wording below is a hard rule, not a suggestion — it applies to every report this tool ever publishes.
Scanned tokens don't get a separate rating system — they get one more chip next to the mint/freeze/LP lights you already check. It reads the same way: green means verified, amber means "look closer."
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Security Shield's public queue isn't open yet. If you want your program among the first Scan Reports, tell us on Telegram.
Request an early scan ↗