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Fiber is designed to give users open access to private, self-custodial financial tools. Instead of relying on traditional banking rails, custodial platforms, or permissioned financial products, users can use Fiber to hold, move, and manage supported assets directly. Fiber is global by design, private by default, and built to be used on your own terms.

What this means in Fiber

With Fiber, users can:
  • Create an account with phone or email
  • Access the app without traditional KYC
  • Hold supported stablecoins and wealth assets
  • Send and receive supported assets
  • Manage balances and transaction activity privately
  • Access built-in yield where supported
  • Maintain self-custody over their funds
  • Use Fiber wherever the app is available
Fiber gives users a more open way to interact with onchain finance without giving up privacy or control.

No-KYC by default

Fiber is designed to be non-KYC at its core. Users can get started with familiar login methods such as phone or email, without going through traditional identity verification to access the app. Because Fiber does not custody user assets, it does not need to custody unnecessary personal information either. This matters because privacy and dignity should be respected. Wanting financial privacy should not be inherently treated as suspicious. Fiber is built to give users a more private way to access self-custodial financial tools without exposing more information than necessary.

Built for global users

Fiber is designed for people who need financial tools that are portable, private, and not fully dependent on local systems. This includes:
  • Remote workers
  • Freelancers
  • Onchain earners
  • Global digital workers
  • Crypto-native users
  • People paid across borders
  • Users in volatile currency environments
  • Users who want private access to stable value
  • Users who want more control over how they store and manage wealth
Fiber is not limited to one geography, one banking system, or one type of user.

User responsibility

Fiber makes global access easier, but users are still responsible for understanding the laws, rules, and restrictions that may apply in their own country or region. Availability of specific features, assets, or services may vary depending on jurisdiction, supported networks, product availability, or legal requirements. Users should make sure their use of Fiber is permitted where they live.

Q&A

What does permissionless mean?

Permissionless means users can access and use Fiber without relying on approval from a bank, exchange, or centralized intermediary.

Does Fiber require KYC?

Fiber is designed to be non-KYC at its core. Users can get started with familiar login methods such as phone or email.

Can anyone dictate how I use Fiber?

Fiber is designed to give users direct control over their assets. As long as a feature, asset, or network is supported and available, users can use Fiber on their own terms.

Can Fiber block or judge my transactions?

Fiber is designed around private, self-custodial access. Users control their own assets, and Fiber is not built to analyze, judge, or publicly expose a user’s financial activity.

Is Fiber available globally?

Fiber is designed to be globally accessible, but availability of specific features, assets, and services may vary by region.

Can I send and receive stablecoins?

Yes. Fiber is designed to support sending, receiving, holding, and managing supported stablecoins.

Is Fiber private?

Yes. Privacy is a core part of Fiber’s design. Fiber is built to help users manage assets without exposing unnecessary information about their balances, transactions, or financial history.

Does Fiber replace my bank?

Not necessarily. Fiber is not meant to replace every financial service. It gives users another way to privately hold, manage, and access supported digital assets outside of traditional financial rails.

Do I need to follow local laws?

Yes. Users are responsible for understanding and following the laws and regulations that apply in their own jurisdiction.