Straight answers on privacy and compliance
No vague claims. Here is exactly where CoinA stands today, and where it doesn't.
Privacy
CoinA uses standard blockchain pseudonymity. Wallet addresses are not tied to your real-world identity on-chain, but balances and transactions sit on a public ledger that anyone can read. CoinA is therefore pseudonymous, not anonymous or fully confidential. We do not currently use zero-knowledge or shielded transactions; if that changes, we will update this page.
Regulatory posture
CoinA is an early-stage project being built with established financial-compliance frameworks in mind. We are not yet licensed or registered as a financial institution, money transmitter or securities issuer in any jurisdiction. Nothing here is an offer of securities or financial advice, and you are responsible for the laws that apply where you live.
KYC & AML
The CoinA network does not run a KYC or AML process today. When you move between fiat and CoinA through a third-party exchange or partner, that provider's own KYC/AML rules apply. If CoinA introduces identity or transaction checks later, the triggers and thresholds will be published here before they take effect.
Security & audits
An independent third-party security audit is planned but has not been completed or published. Until it is, we will not claim CoinA has been audited. When the audit is done, the firm and full report will be linked from this page.
What we don't claim
- We are not a bank, and CoinA holdings are not insured or guaranteed.
- CoinA is not anonymous; the public ledger is visible to anyone.
- We are not licensed or registered in any jurisdiction yet.
- No security audit has been published.
Still have questions?
If you are a partner, regulator or journalist who needs more detail, reach out and our team will respond.
This page is informational and is not legal, financial or tax advice. It reflects CoinA's status as of the date shown and will be updated as things change.