Announcement: We’re currently investigating why Dexscreener is showing “This pair has unknown liquidity” and why Clanker is flagging “WARNING: UNUSUAL_POSITIONS.” We have already reached out to the @dexscreener team and @clanker_world to review and resolve this. One possible cause is the initial liquidity range at launch, which was approximately 0.8 to 1 ETH, but we are confirming this directly with the platforms. To be clear, trading is live and functioning normally. The official contract address is: 0x80B84b63C88D054d300D51E801C2a65e20d44b07 We’ll share updates as soon as we receive confirmation.
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$KNT is trending top 1 on Clanker CA: 0x80B84b63C88D054d300D51E801C2a65e20d44b07 https://clanker.world/
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The internet taught us to encrypt messages, but never taught us how to hide relationships. Even today, most “private” communication still flows through servers that map who talks to whom, when, and how often. Content might be encrypted. Metadata isn’t. Social graphs aren’t. Patterns aren’t. $KNT starts from a different assumption: privacy is not a feature you toggle. It’s a property of the network itself. No servers. No accounts. No directories. Just nodes talking to nodes, forwarding messages without ever seeing the full picture. Once the network reaches scale, anonymity isn’t optional, it’s automatic. This isn’t about hiding messages. It’s about breaking surveillance at the structural level. If $ZEC showed that money doesn’t need transparency to function, KayakNet asks the same question of communication. What does a network look like when privacy is the default, not the exception? This is not an app. It’s not a platform. It’s a new primitive for how humans communicate online.
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