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Greenlit is the verified launchpad on Robinhood Chain. Fixed supply, locked liquidity, and 0.48% of every trade paid to the creator — forever.

Greenlit is independent and is not endorsed by Robinhood. Tokens are risky — verify every contract before transacting.

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Legal

Content & Acceptable Use

Last updated: July 13, 2026

Anyone can launch a token through Greenlit in minutes — which is exactly why the lines need to be bright. Here is what is banned, how to report it, and an honest account of what a takedown can and cannot reach.

The short version

Banned outright: impersonating real people or brands, stolen artwork and trademarks, CSAM and other illegal content, and fraud or phishing of any kind.

Enforcement is honest about its limits. We can delist a token from this interface and unpin its files from our IPFS account — nobody can erase the blockchain.

Report violations to [CONTACT EMAIL]. Copyright owners can use the DMCA process below; creators get a counter-notice path.

This summary is here to help you read, not to replace anything. The full text below is what applies.

On this page

  1. 01What this policy covers
  2. 02Prohibited content
  3. 03Prohibited conduct
  4. 04Enforcement — what we can and cannot do
  5. 05Reporting content
  6. 06Copyright (DMCA) notices
  7. 07Counter-notices
  8. 08Repeat offenders
  9. 09Changes to this policy
  10. 10Contact

01What this policy covers

This policy governs the content people attach to tokens launched through Greenlit — names, tickers, descriptions, images, and links — and the conduct around launching and promoting them. It is part of the Terms of Service; launching a token means you agreed to it.

One structural fact shapes everything here: the Operator moderates an interface, not a blockchain. What that distinction means in practice is spelled out in the enforcement section — read it before relying on any takedown.

02Prohibited content

Never launch a token whose name, ticker, description, image, or links contain or promote:

  • Impersonation. Content that presents a token as being created, issued, or endorsed by a real person, company, brand, or public figure who did not actually launch it — including use of names, logos, photos, or “official”-sounding claims. Obvious parody is not a safe harbor when it is likely to actually deceive people into buying.
  • Intellectual-property infringement. Copyrighted artwork, trademarks, or other protected material you do not have rights to use.
  • Child sexual abuse material (CSAM) or any sexualized depiction of minors — in any form, with zero tolerance. Confirmed CSAM is reported to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) and relevant authorities.
  • Fraud and phishing. Fake giveaways, wallet drainers, links to credential-harvesting or malware sites, impersonation of wallet or exchange support, or promises of guaranteed returns, airdrops, or listings.
  • Other illegal content — terrorism promotion, credible threats or incitement of violence, doxxing (publishing someone’s private personal information), non-consensual intimate imagery, or content facilitating the sale of illegal goods and services.

03Prohibited conduct

Independent of the content itself, do not:

  • promote a token with materially false claims — fake partnerships, fake team members, fabricated audits or endorsements, or invented utility;
  • coordinate market manipulation around a launch (wash trading, pump-and-dump groups, spoofing);
  • relaunch prohibited content under trivially altered names or images, or use tooling to spam the launch pipeline;
  • abuse the interface’s APIs, rate limits, or upload endpoints.

04Enforcement — what we can and cannot do

When content violates this policy, the Operator can:

  • Delist the token from the Greenlit interface — it disappears from listing pages, search, and the public launch API on greenlit.fun;
  • Stop serving its image and metadata through the interface’s own IPFS gateway routes;
  • Unpin the content from the interface’s Pinata account, removing the copy whose persistence the Operator pays for;
  • rate-limit or block the wallets and IPs involved from the interface’s server endpoints.

What no one can do: the token contract, its metadata reference, and its transaction history live on a public blockchain, and copies of IPFS content may persist on nodes and gateways the Operator does not control. Delisting removes content from this interface; it cannot erase it from the blockchain or the wider IPFS network. Anyone claiming they can fully delete on-chain content is misleading you.

Enforcement decisions are made case by case, by a human, and may be applied without prior notice where the content is clearly illegal or actively harming people. Honest borderline calls (edgy humor, non-deceptive parody) get more benefit of the doubt than anything designed to deceive.

05Reporting content

To report a token that violates this policy, email [CONTACT EMAIL] with:

  • the token’s contract address (0x…) or its Greenlit URL;
  • which part of this policy you believe it violates;
  • enough context to evaluate the report (for impersonation: who is being impersonated and why it is deceptive);
  • your contact information if a follow-up may be needed.

Reports go to a single human operator. Urgent categories — CSAM, active phishing, credible threats — are prioritized ahead of everything else. You do not need to be the affected party to report.

06Copyright (DMCA) notices

If you own a copyright and believe token content launched through Greenlit infringes it, send a notice to [CONTACT EMAIL] with the subject “DMCA notice” including, consistent with 17 U.S.C. § 512(c)(3):

  1. identification of the copyrighted work you claim is infringed;
  2. identification of the infringing material and where it appears (token contract address and/or greenlit.fun URL);
  3. your name, address, telephone number, and email address;
  4. a statement that you have a good-faith belief the use is not authorized by the copyright owner, its agent, or the law;
  5. a statement, under penalty of perjury, that the notice is accurate and that you are the copyright owner or authorized to act for the owner;
  6. your physical or electronic signature.

On receipt of a valid notice, the Operator will act within the scope described in the enforcement section — delisting from the interface and unpinning from the interface’s Pinata account. Knowingly misrepresenting that material is infringing can make you liable for damages under 17 U.S.C. § 512(f). Trademark complaints follow the same process with the subject “Trademark notice”.

07Counter-notices

If your token was delisted after a copyright notice and you believe that was a mistake or misidentification, you may send a counter-notice to [CONTACT EMAIL] containing: identification of the removed material and its former location; a statement under penalty of perjury that you have a good-faith belief the removal was a mistake or misidentification; your name, address, and phone number; consent to the jurisdiction of the federal district court for your address (or, if outside the United States, any judicial district in which the Operator may be found) and to accepting service of process from the original complainant; and your physical or electronic signature. If the complainant does not notify the Operator within 10–14 business days that they have filed a court action, the delisting may be reversed.

08Repeat offenders

Wallets and operators of launches that repeatedly infringe or violate this policy will be blocked from the interface’s launch endpoints and their launches delisted, without further warnings. The Operator maintains and applies this repeat-infringer practice as a matter of policy.

09Changes to this policy

This policy will evolve with the abuse it has to handle. Changes are posted here with an updated “Last updated” date, and material changes will be flagged on the interface for a reasonable period. Enforcement always applies the version current at the time of the action.

10Contact

Reports, DMCA notices, counter-notices, and questions about this policy: [CONTACT EMAIL].

The other Greenlit policies

Terms of ServiceThe agreement that applies whenever you use the Greenlit interface.Privacy PolicyThe little data we process, why, and what can never be deleted.Risk DisclosurePlain talk about how badly memecoin launches and trades can go.