Although it would be bad for the user, since they likely wouldn’t have the exact same mint that is whitelisted, so the offline benefits dematerialize

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

If the receiver wants to give the sender this kind of assurance then it should be on the receiver to choose a trusted mint. And if the sender is not cool with the receiver's chosen mint then it should be on the sender to make the receiver aware of that.