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Risk disclosure

Invia removes one specific risk, counterparty default, by making settlement atomic. It does not remove every other risk involved in trading low-cap SPL tokens. This page is honest about the difference.

What atomic settlement protects you from

Delivery defaultThe counterparty cannot take your payment without you receiving the asset. Both legs land in one transaction or neither does.
Mid-trade ghostingThere is no window between you paying and the maker delivering. The window does not exist.
Operator skimmingThere is no operator. The fee is the 20 bps in the program; there is no desk taking a hidden spread.
Front-running of your fillThe price is fixed at offer creation. The taker submits a fill at that price; there is no MEV path between offer and settlement.

What it does NOT protect you from

A bad token pickListing is permissionless. The asset can be any SPL mint, including impersonators of legitimate tokens. The price you see is the maker's chosen price, not a fair market price.
Off-chain market movesOnce you fill, you own the asset. If the price drops by 30% in the next hour, that's your position.
Honeypots and odd token logicSome SPL tokens have transfer hooks, freeze authorities, or burn-on-transfer logic. These will not block the settlement (the program transfers tokens normally) but may affect what you can do with them after.
Wallet compromiseStandard wallet hygiene applies. Invia cannot protect against a signing key that an attacker controls.
Frontend tamperingIf the frontend at invia.markets is compromised, it could mislead about which offer you are filling. Verifying the mint and amounts in your wallet's transaction preview is the defense.

Before you fill an offer

  1. Verify the asset mint. Look up the mint address on a block explorer and confirm it matches the project you intend to trade.
  2. Check the price against mid. The app shows the live Jupiter aggregated mid. If the offer price is wildly off mid, ask why.
  3. Check the maker. A wallet that has settled many fills is a stronger counterparty signal than a fresh wallet (though it does not protect you from a bad token pick, only from a bad maker).
  4. Confirm the transaction preview. Your wallet shows the exact instruction and the token amounts before you sign. Read it.
The protocol's job is settlement, not curation

Invia does not vouch for, curate, or rank tokens. There is no allowlist. There is no team review of listings. The protocol guarantees that the trade you sign is the trade that settles. It does not guarantee that the trade is one you should make.