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The Stalker Score (Confluence)

The Stalker Score, shown in the dossier as the Confluence section, is the Nun Report's single "should I care about this?" read. It combines every independent signal in the dossier into one tier, so you don't have to weigh a dozen things in your head.

Why "confluence"?​

Confluence means signals agreeing. One warning might be noise; several unrelated warnings firing at once is a pattern. The score groups signals into independent "axes", the contract, the insider group, the market, the deployer, the credibility, the social attention, and only escalates when different axes point the same way. That design stops a single loud signal from dominating.

The tiers​

The Confluence badge shows a tier and a score:

BadgeMeaning
notableOne moderate positive signal, mildly interesting.
strongA couple of independent positives lining up.
πŸ’‘ interestingSeveral positive signals stacked together: the strongest "pay attention" read.
⚠ riskThe signals lean dangerous; treat with caution.
(none)Nothing notable; the section is hidden.

On feed cards you'll see the same tiers as small badges, e.g. πŸ’‘ interesting, strong, or ⚠ risk.

Fired signals​

Under the badge, the dossier lists the fired signals, the plain-English reasons the score landed where it did, for example:

  • smart social attention / high-conviction social attention: credible accounts are converging on it (see Social Attention).
  • contract anomaly: the contract has a risky lever.
  • insider bundle: a coordinated group holds the supply.
  • …and others drawn from the checks throughout the dossier.
Signals are neutral by design

The fired-signal names describe what was detected, never how. They're written to be readable at a glance without needing any background.

How to use it​

  1. Use it as a summary, not a verdict. An interesting score means "multiple things line up here": good or concerning depending on the signals. Always read the fired signals to know which.
  2. ⚠ risk is a stop sign. It means the balance of evidence is negative. Don't brush past it.
  3. Cross-check with Red Flags. The Red Flags section is the list of hard problems; the Stalker Score is the weighted overall picture. Read both.
What it means for you

Think of the Stalker Score like a doctor's overall impression after running several tests. It's the fastest way to triage a token, but you still read the individual "test results" (the sections below) before making a decision.