SECURITY SETTINGS
Learn how to protect your bot using security settings
The Security Settings work similarly to presets and use the same underlying logic. Their purpose is to ensure that before the bot buys any token, a series of security and due-diligence checks are performed automatically, based entirely on your settings.
These filters help reduce risk by controlling where, what, and under which conditions the bot is allowed to trade.
DEX Filter
You can choose which DEXes the bot is allowed to trade on.
Token Age Range
This filter helps avoid tokens that are either too new (high rug-pull risk) or too old (low volatility). You can define a range in minutes, for example from 60 minutes (1 hour) to 1,440 minutes (24 hours), meaning the bot will trade only tokens launched within that window.
Market Cap Range
You can exclude tokens with very low market caps (for example, below $50k) and very large tokens (for example, above $10M). This helps focus on tokens where volatility bots are most effective.
Liquidity Range
Liquidity is critical for safety. Tokens with very low liquidity are more prone to rug pulls and high slippage, while tokens with extremely high liquidity often have very small price movements, making volatility strategies less effective.
Volume Range
This filter ensures the token has enough trading activity. You can define how much volume must have been traded over a specific period (for example, the last 24 hours). This prevents the bot from buying tokens that dropped in price but have little or no real activity.
Volatility Index
The Volatility Index measures how much the price moves over time. You can require a minimum volatility level to ensure trading opportunities exist, while also setting a maximum to avoid excessively risky tokens.
Smart Wallet Filters
Mizar analyzes and labels wallets across the blockchain, identifying smart wallets, risky wallets, and suspicious wallets. These labels power some of the strongest security filters.
You can require:
A minimum and maximum amount bought by smart wallets over a period
A minimum number of smart wallets participating (for example, at least 10)
On chains like BNB and Base, itβs strongly recommended to require both smart buys and smart sells. If smart wallets can sell, the token is very unlikely to be a honeypot.
You can also filter by Smart Money Inflow, which is the difference between smart wallet buys and sells, giving a clearer picture of smart capital movement.
Price Change Range
This filter helps avoid extreme situations, such as tokens that dropped or pumped 100% or more in a short time. Itβs useful for avoiding late entries during pump-and-dump scenarios.
Risky Wallets & Fresh Wallets
Risky wallets are automatically labeled based on past behavior (frequent scams or rugs). You can limit how much activity from risky wallets is allowed, for example max 20% of buys over the last 24 hours.
Fresh wallets are wallets with little or no trading history and are often used to fake volume. While itβs impossible to avoid them completely, setting a maximum (for example 50β60%) helps reduce risk. A common and effective setup is 20% risky wallets and 50% fresh wallets.
Token Name Filter
This filter excludes tokens without Latin characters in their name. It was designed mainly to help users avoid tokens they cannot easily recognize.
Managing Security Filters
Once configured, you can review all active filters in the overview. You can add, modify, or remove filters at any time. Clicking Save will show a final review before confirming the settings.
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