Understanding Cognivo Answers
Cognivo is built to be evidence-first. When you ask about a token, wallet, or contract, Cognivo reports what it can verify directly from on-chain evidence, clearly labels anything that is added context, and tells you when something could not be verified.
This section explains how to read those answers so you can interpret them accurately.
What you'll find here
- Grounded vs Augmented Evidence — the two kinds of evidence Cognivo uses and which one takes priority.
- Liquidity Intelligence — how Cognivo reads liquidity pool context and reports pool coverage.
- Burned-LP Custody — what burned LP means, and why it is not the same as a timed lock.
- Registry Attribution — what registry rows do and do not prove.
- Risk & Security Signals — how risk answers are formed and how to read them.
- Summary Replies & Follow-ups — A/B/C/D options and shorter recaps.
- Not Verified, Not Assessed & Augmented — what each status label means.
The one rule to remember
When Cognivo cannot verify a fact, it says so. Cognivo does not present unknowns as confirmed, and no Cognivo answer is a guarantee of safety or a recommendation to buy or sell. Cognivo provides analytical signals, not financial advice.