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In the onchain world, you don’t prove yourself with resumes or bios — you prove it with what you’ve done. Creds are a way to stamp those actions on your identity.
Minting a cred isn’t about collecting something pretty. It’s about putting proof behind what you’ve done, where you’ve been, and what you care about. It’s a signal — not just to others, but to the network itself.
Here’s why minting matters:
Creds aren’t just random tokens — they require meeting specific criteria. You might be able to mint a cred if you:
Deployed a smart contract
Hold a specific token
Follow a particular account
Attended an event
Posted in a certain channel
...or met any other onchain condition defined by the creator
The actual criteria can vary widely — from technical actions to social presence — but the key idea is the same:
Minting a cred means you did something verifiable. It creates a lightweight but durable onchain record:
“This happened — and I was part of it.”
Minting generates structured data linked directly to your address.
This can be indexed and queried:
Who minted a specific cred?
Which creds were minted by people with a certain trait?
What events or projects are connected to this person?
This kind of visibility allows for onchain discovery:
Finding qualified contributors (e.g., someone with a 'Uniswap V4 Salt Seeker' cred likely participated in tasks involving CREATE2 and Ethereum address computation, indicating deep technical knowledge).
Surfacing aligned communities
Filtering and segmenting users based on what they’ve actually done, not what they claim
A wallet full of tokens or NFTs shows transactions. A cred history shows a narrative. It says:
You care about X
You contributed to Y
You were present during Z
Minting cred adds deeper, semantic context to your wallet, shifting the perception from mere 'wallet activity to an expressive identity signal. This makes your onchain presence clearer to others and more meaningful to yourself
Creds can be used as raw materials for:
Gating access to chats, content, or events
Filtering feeds based on interest or participation
Reputation scoring systems
Airdrop eligibility or role assignment
They’re KYC-free inputs to trust and access. Instead of verifying your identity through paperwork, you verify it through what you’ve minted — because each mint reflects something real you’ve done or qualified for.
When two people mint the same cred, it means they share a moment, context, or trait — and both chose to record that fact onchain.
This creates trustless group formation:
People who minted a DAO contributor cred
People who minted a hackathon winner cred
People who minted an early supporter cred
No need for centralized tracking or claims. The network already knows who’s aligned — through mints.
Minting isn't about showing off. It's about showing up — in verifiable, portable, and composable ways.
It’s not the only way to build onchain identity, but it’s a powerful one: small, intentional acts that leave a durable trail of who you are and what you’ve done.
Phi is one of the protocols where such creds can be created, minted, and curated.
In the onchain world, you don’t prove yourself with resumes or bios — you prove it with what you’ve done. Creds are a way to stamp those actions on your identity.
Minting a cred isn’t about collecting something pretty. It’s about putting proof behind what you’ve done, where you’ve been, and what you care about. It’s a signal — not just to others, but to the network itself.
Here’s why minting matters:
Creds aren’t just random tokens — they require meeting specific criteria. You might be able to mint a cred if you:
Deployed a smart contract
Hold a specific token
Follow a particular account
Attended an event
Posted in a certain channel
...or met any other onchain condition defined by the creator
The actual criteria can vary widely — from technical actions to social presence — but the key idea is the same:
Minting a cred means you did something verifiable. It creates a lightweight but durable onchain record:
“This happened — and I was part of it.”
Minting generates structured data linked directly to your address.
This can be indexed and queried:
Who minted a specific cred?
Which creds were minted by people with a certain trait?
What events or projects are connected to this person?
This kind of visibility allows for onchain discovery:
Finding qualified contributors (e.g., someone with a 'Uniswap V4 Salt Seeker' cred likely participated in tasks involving CREATE2 and Ethereum address computation, indicating deep technical knowledge).
Surfacing aligned communities
Filtering and segmenting users based on what they’ve actually done, not what they claim
A wallet full of tokens or NFTs shows transactions. A cred history shows a narrative. It says:
You care about X
You contributed to Y
You were present during Z
Minting cred adds deeper, semantic context to your wallet, shifting the perception from mere 'wallet activity to an expressive identity signal. This makes your onchain presence clearer to others and more meaningful to yourself
Creds can be used as raw materials for:
Gating access to chats, content, or events
Filtering feeds based on interest or participation
Reputation scoring systems
Airdrop eligibility or role assignment
They’re KYC-free inputs to trust and access. Instead of verifying your identity through paperwork, you verify it through what you’ve minted — because each mint reflects something real you’ve done or qualified for.
When two people mint the same cred, it means they share a moment, context, or trait — and both chose to record that fact onchain.
This creates trustless group formation:
People who minted a DAO contributor cred
People who minted a hackathon winner cred
People who minted an early supporter cred
No need for centralized tracking or claims. The network already knows who’s aligned — through mints.
Minting isn't about showing off. It's about showing up — in verifiable, portable, and composable ways.
It’s not the only way to build onchain identity, but it’s a powerful one: small, intentional acts that leave a durable trail of who you are and what you’ve done.
Phi is one of the protocols where such creds can be created, minted, and curated.
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