FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Utility tokens grant access or usage; security tokens represent an investment contract or asset and are regulated like securities.

Only if the terms and laws allow it. Transfers may be restricted by lockups, jurisdiction, or investor eligibility.

Distributions follow the offering terms and are typically calculated by smart contracts and paid to your approved wallet or bank account.

Issuers may charge offering and administrative fees. Network fees apply to on-chain transactions. Check each deal’s fee table.

Use a hardware wallet and secure backups. If you use a custodian, account recovery processes may be available.

Insurance, if any, depends on the custodian and jurisdiction. Review each offering and custody agreement.

Taxes vary by country and instrument type. Keep detailed records and consult a qualified advisor.

Not necessarily—market cap and token supply matter more.

Flat price with gradually rising volume and higher lows; however, do your due deligence.

It depends, maybe starting with 5–10 across different sectors can be a good idea.

Some times, yes—higher upside and higher risk. Size accordingly and set strict invalidation.

No. SMBs and creators can tokenize revenue shares, memberships, or invoices—so long as compliance is handled.

It reduces them, but you still need auditors, legal counsel, and service providers for custody and KYC in most jurisdictions.

Not necessarily. A robust tokenizer can manage multiple asset classes with different rule sets.

Yes—if contracts, price oracles, and risk parameters are in place, tokens can be used as collateral or in liquidity pools.

Nobilior is a web-based ERC-1155 tokenization platform that lets you mint blockchain tokens representing assets, documents, or ideas on Ethereum or Sepolia.

No, as of this whitepaper version there is no native Nobilior token issued.

No, it is an informational, non-binding document and not legal advice, investment advice, or a securities offering.

Users are fully responsible for the legality, accuracy, and rights to any content or assets they tokenize.

No, tokenization alone does not create, transfer, or confirm legal rights, titles, or interests.

No, you should obtain professional legal, tax, and regulatory advice before using Nobilior for critical or regulated use cases.

Nobilior currently supports Ethereum mainnet and the Sepolia test network.

Nobilior uses the ERC-1155 standard for both single and multi-supply tokens.

No, the platform is built with guided forms and workflows specifically to be accessible to non-technical users.

Individuals, teams, and organizations worldwide can use Nobilior, subject to their local laws and regulations.

Yes, they can tokenize experimental findings, datasets, or models to create timestamped on-chain records.

Yes, photographers, musicians, writers, and other creators can tokenize works for provenance and collecting.

Yes, businesses, lawyers, and traders can tokenize contracts, agreements, or rights for more streamlined document and ownership management.

Yes, public entities and NGOs can test transparent registries or pilot projects on the platform.

Yes, users can mint multiple ERC-1155 tokens to represent fractional or multi-unit interests.

The Title is a short, descriptive name for the asset of up to 120 characters.

It’s a brief plain-text description explaining what the asset is, what it does, and why it matters, limited to around 750 characters.

Tags help discovery in the marketplace by describing the asset’s domain, function, or category.

Connecting a wallet proves control over the asset’s address and allows the platform to mint and assign tokens to you.

No, you keep full control of your EVM wallet; Nobilior interacts with it but does not hold your private keys.

It controls whether your asset is public, partially accessible via private links, or sealed with restricted visibility.

Public disclosure means your asset’s high-level metadata can be displayed in Nobilior’s marketplace for anyone to discover.

Partial disclosure means access is limited to those with a private link or similar restricted access method.

Sealed disclosure keeps visibility tightly restricted, limiting exposure of the asset’s details.

It’s an optional date you set to delay public visibility of your asset or details until after that date.

It’s a high-level signal about how you intend to license the asset, such as inclusive, non-exclusive, open, or contact-only.

No, it is only indicative and does not replace actual legal contracts or licenses.

It defines a percentage for potential secondary-sale royalties compatible with EIP-2981-enabled marketplaces.

Royalties are paid to the designated EVM Royalty Payout Address you provide in the form.

Royalties are paid to the designated EVM Royalty Payout Address you provide in the form.

Yes, the Supply field controls the number of ERC-1155 tokens created, from single units to large multi-supply sets.

A supply of 1 typically represents single ownership or a unique token.

A supply greater than 1 can represent fractional ownership or multiple identical units of the same asset.

It is an off-chain, human-readable label like “Patent Token” or “Membership Pass” to help categorize the token.

Yes, you can choose between Sepolia for testing and Ethereum mainnet for durable records.

Yes, you can use Sepolia for experimentation and later mint on Ethereum when ready.

The Cover Image is a small image (e.g., PNG/JPEG/WebP) used to visually represent your tokenized asset.

Yes, you can upload up to 10 MB of supporting files like PDFs, documents, media, or data files.

No, larger files are stored off-chain in secure infrastructure managed by Nobilior.

You confirm you control rights to disclose/license the asset, understand this is not a patent filing, and consent to data processing.

Nobilior stores the asset record locally and prepares it for minting, but nothing is on-chain yet.

It is minted after you approve the transaction, pay the fees, and the transaction is successfully broadcast to the blockchain.

Yes, the platform estimates network gas, platform commission, and storage fees before you confirm minting.

You pay gas fees directly from your connected EVM wallet on the chosen network.

Nobilior charges a platform commission on relevant minting-related fees and collects storage and retention fees for off-chain data.

No, pricing can be updated periodically, though multi-year prepayments are honored until they expire.

They are fees you pay based on file size, duration, and service level to keep off-chain files hosted.

Nobilior aims to keep hosted files available for up to 10 years, depending on retention plans and operations.

No, testnet functionality is for research only and may change or be discontinued, possibly leading to data loss.

A: Local and testnet-focused records are kept mainly for experimentation and are typically removed after about 10 days.

It’s your on-platform view where you can see and manage the tokens you’ve minted or hold via Nobilior.