This document provides an extended explanation of the Mintly project, its operational model, and the security principles that govern how the Service works. It is intended to complement — and not replace — the Terms of Use, which remain the primary and legally binding document regulating your interaction with Mintly. In the event of any inconsistencies, the Terms of Use prevail.
Mintly is a non-custodial Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) tool that helps users deploy token smart contracts on a public blockchain. It provides a simplified interface for preparing deployment data, but it does not control the blockchain, does not sign transactions on behalf of users, and does not participate in the issuance, distribution, or management of any tokens.
Mintly is not a financial service, exchange, broker, marketplace, token issuer, or an intermediary.
Its role is limited to assisting users with generating and broadcasting deployment data that they sign themselves through their own non-custodial wallets.
Mintly does not control or execute blockchain transactions. It does not store or request private keys or seed phrases, nor does it gain access to users’ wallets or funds. All actions performed on a blockchain are signed and authorized solely by the user.
Once a transaction is signed, it is transmitted to the blockchain, where it becomes part of a decentralized network outside Mintly’s control. Mintly cannot modify, reverse, cancel, or override any blockchain activity, including smart contract deployments.
Blockchain networks operate independently of Mintly. They are decentralized systems governed by consensus rules and maintained by thousands of distributed participants. Mintly has no authority over:
Because of this decentralization, once a smart contract is deployed, its behavior is determined purely by its code and by the blockchain environment — not by Mintly.
Smart contracts deployed through Mintly operate autonomously. They cannot be altered, revoked, or disabled by Mintly after deployment.
This autonomy ensures transparency but also means that the User is fully responsible for understanding the consequences of deployment.
Mintly relies on several core security principles:
Mintly does not store or access:
All signatures and approvals are executed exclusively by the User in their own wallet.
Mintly may retain minimal non-personal technical information (such as wallet address, network used, and basic metadata) strictly for operational integrity and abuse prevention.
The team behind Mintly regularly performs maintenance and implements reasonable security measures intended to provide stable operation of the Service. However, no system operating online can eliminate all forms of risk, and various external threats may still occur.
Due to the nature of decentralized technologies and third-party environments, certain risks are outside the scope of Mintly’s influence. These include, but are not limited to:
The User acknowledges these risks and accepts full responsibility for any outcomes related to the use of blockchain networks.
Mintly does not evaluate, audit, review, or approve the smart contracts or tokens created by users. It does not assess their legality, technical correctness, safety, economic soundness, or suitability for any purpose.
The User is solely responsible for:
Even if a token is deployed by mistake, in the wrong network, with incorrect parameters, or under an incorrect wallet address, the responsibility for such outcomes remains entirely with the User.
Mintly does not receive, store, manage, or retain any share of tokens created by users. All tokens and smart contract permissions belong exclusively to the User and are assigned to the wallet used to sign the deployment transaction.
To reduce risks associated with decentralized technologies, Users are encouraged to:
These measures are advisory, not mandatory, but they help reduce exposure to common threats.
This document serves as an extended explanation of the Mintly project and its security philosophy. It does not replace the Terms of Use.
All provisions of the Terms of Use remain fully binding, including:
In case of any inconsistency, the Terms of Use prevail.