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SecurityJune 20, 2026·5 min read

InterFi Network Audit: What It Means for $YFIN Investors

Smart contract audits are one of the most important — and most overlooked — due diligence steps before investing in any crypto token. An audit doesn't guarantee profit, but it does verify that the code behind a token does what it claims, and doesn't contain hidden functions that could harm holders.

What a Smart Contract Audit Actually Checks

Auditors review a token's code line by line, looking for vulnerabilities such as: hidden mint functions that could inflate supply unexpectedly, backdoor functions allowing the owner to drain liquidity, reentrancy vulnerabilities that could be exploited to steal funds, and ownership and access control issues.

The $YFIN Audit Results

$YFIN's smart contract was audited by InterFi Network on June 8, 2026. The results: zero Critical findings, zero Major findings, and zero Medium findings. A small number of Minor and informational notes were identified — typical for most contracts — relating mainly to centralization considerations rather than security vulnerabilities.

Why Zero Critical/Major/Medium Findings Matters

Many token rug pulls happen because of exactly the kind of vulnerabilities a proper audit is designed to catch — hidden mint functions, owner-only drain functions, or unlimited approval exploits. A clean audit result significantly reduces (though never fully eliminates) this category of risk.

What the Audit Doesn't Cover

It's important to understand the limits of an audit. A smart contract audit verifies the code's technical security — it does not evaluate the project's business model, the team's intentions, market conditions, or price performance. For $YFIN specifically, the audit confirms the token contract is technically sound; the real-world business backing (PT Cikal Tuna Mandiri) is verified separately through its own transaction records published at monitor.yfin.io.

How to Verify the Audit Yourself

The full audit report is publicly available at yfin.io/audit.pdf. Anyone can review the findings independently, and cross-reference the audited contract address against the live contract on BscScan to confirm they match: 0xF576bcFac0fefc2119f8b119e3a1ac1505F2FD45.

Why This Should Be Standard Practice

Investors evaluating any token — not just $YFIN — should always check for a published, reputable third-party audit before committing funds. The absence of an audit, or an audit from an unknown or unverifiable firm, is a significant red flag worth taking seriously.

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