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Social Attention

Social Attention answers: "Who credible is paying attention to this token, and how?" Hype is easy to fake with bot accounts, so the Nun Report doesn't count raw noise; it weighs who is engaging and gives you the named accounts so you can judge for yourself.

The tier badge

The section header carries a tier:

TierMeaning
elite (purple)Major, high-conviction accounts are paying attention.
strong (green)Established, credible accounts are engaging.
notable (orange)Emerging or secondary accounts are engaging.

This tier also feeds the Stalker Score as smart social attention / high-conviction social attention.

In-house social standing

If available, you'll see a line like "In-house social standing: B · 12 credible follows · 3 mutuals." This is the Nun Report's own graph-based read of how well-connected the project's account is within a network of credible accounts, not just a raw follower count (which is easy to buy). More credible follows and mutuals = stronger standing.

The "Paying attention" list

The most useful part: an actual list of the credible accounts engaging with the token. Each row shows:

@handle ↗ [tier] engaged ↗
  • @handle: links to the account's X profile (these are public accounts).
  • tier chip: our read of that account's credibility: elite / strong / notable.
  • engagement type: followed, mentioned, replied, or engaged. When it links out (), it goes to the specific tweet so you can read the context yourself. (Retweets are intentionally excluded; a retweet is weaker signal than an original post.)

The list is paginated (5 at a time) and sorted with the most credible accounts first.

How to use Social Attention

  1. Read the names, not just the tier. Click through to the accounts and their tweets: do you rate them? Is the engagement genuine interest or a paid shill?
  2. elite/strong attention is a lead, never a buy signal. Credible people watching a token means it's worth a look; it does not mean it's safe or that they've bought.
  3. Weigh it against the risk sections. Strong social attention on a token with a malicious contract or an insider bundle often just means the trap is well-marketed.
Why this is more honest than a follower count

Anyone can buy 50,000 followers. It's much harder to get genuinely credible, well-connected accounts to engage. By showing you who and how, the Nun Report lets you judge the quality of the attention instead of trusting a number.