Self-Custody Defines How Assets Are Held on STONfi



In DeFi, ownership isn’t assumed it’s enforced through self-custody.

On STONfi, users don’t transfer control of their assets to the platform. Instead, they interact directly from their wallets, keeping full authority over their funds at every step.

The structure is straightforward.
Users connect a wallet, approve transactions, and execute swaps or liquidity actions without depositing assets into a centralized system.
This changes how risk is distributed.

Rather than relying on a third party to secure funds, responsibility stays with the user. Assets remain in the wallet, and access is determined solely by private keys.

Self-custody also affects how users engage with the protocol.
Every action from swapping to farming is permission-based, not custodial. This allows participation without account creation or external approval.

At the same time, it introduces a different layer of responsibility.
Security, backup, and key management become essential parts of the experience. There is no recovery mechanism tied to identity only to access credentials controlled by the user.

On STONfi, self-custody isn’t an added feature.
It’s the foundation that defines how assets are held, how transactions are executed, and how users interact with DeFi.
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