
How Meme Tokens Use Locked Liquidity as a Fake Safety Net to Scam Investors
Many meme token projects claim to be “safe” because they have locked liquidity—but this is just another deceptive marketing tactic. Scammers use fake liquidity locks, partial locks, or hidden loopholes to make investors believe the project is secure, only to pull the rug later. 247 Satoshi ($247) is here to expose these scams and protect the people from falling into the trap.
The Fake Liquidity Lock Scam: How It Works
🚨 Short-Term Liquidity Locks – Scammers lock liquidity for just a few days or weeks, knowing that most investors won’t check the unlock date. Once it expires, they remove all funds and rug the project.
🚨 Partial Liquidity Locks – A project may lock only a small percentage of liquidity while keeping most of it unlocked. They then drain the unlocked liquidity while investors still believe they’re safe.
🚨 Fake Lock Screenshots – Some scams Photoshop liquidity lock confirmations or use unverified third-party lockers that don’t actually secure anything.
🚨 Dev Wallet Control – Even if liquidity is “locked,” scammers can still own a majority of the tokens, meaning they can sell everything and drain the liquidity pool anyway.
🚨 Mint Functions & Backdoors – Some meme token contracts include hidden minting functions that let the devs print more tokens at any time, dumping them onto the liquidity pool and stealing funds.
Why Locked Liquidity Doesn’t Always Mean Safety
📉 It’s a Marketing Gimmick – Scammers know that “liquidity locked” sounds reassuring, but in reality, they always have a way to withdraw funds.
⏳ Locks Expire Without Warning – Many investors don’t check liquidity lock timers, allowing scammers to quietly remove funds as soon as it’s possible.
⚠️ Insider Token Dumps Still Drain Liquidity – Even if liquidity is locked, developers and insiders can still rug the project by selling their holdings and crashing the price.
How to Avoid Liquidity Lock Scams
✅ Check the Unlock Date – If liquidity is only locked for a few days or weeks, it’s a trap.
✅ Look for 100% Locks – If only a portion of liquidity is locked, the rest is at risk.
✅ Verify the Locker – Always check if the liquidity is locked through a trusted and verifiable service.
✅ Examine Tokenomics – If the dev team holds a large percentage of the supply, they can still rug by dumping their tokens.
✅ Scan the Contract – Look for minting functions or backdoor codes that let developers bypass the lock.
247 Satoshi: Fighting Back Against Liquidity Lock Lies
Meme token scammers have been using fake liquidity locks as a safety net to lure people into their rugs for far too long. 247 Satoshi is exposing these scams, raiding fraudulent projects, and warning the people before they get wrecked.
🔥 Join the fight. Call out the frauds. Raid the scams.
💬 Telegram: https://t.me/Chat247Satoshi
📢 X: https://x.com/247Satoshi
