Learn how to spot scams, pause before you click, and protect your money — without hype, shame, or jargon.
Who NanaProof is for
- You’re new to crypto and want a safe way in — without being talked down to.
- You already use crypto, but feel one wrong click away from a costly mistake.
- You create crypto content and want an ethical, trust-first reputation.
What you’ll learn here
- How to pause before you act and spot classic scam patterns.
- How to run a simple proof routine before you click, sign, or send money.
- How FOMO, authority, and social pressure trick your brain — and how to stay calm.
- How minimum integrity standards like the MIR Seal can help you decide who to trust.
How NanaProof works
- Learn the basics in clear, simple language, without technical walls or hype
- Build simple safety habits with proof-first routines you can repeat every time.
- Use MIR standards to decide who to trust — and who to walk away from.
Start with these
- Seed phrase — What a seed phrase really is, why it’s the master key to your wallet, and how to keep it offline and safe.
- Wallet — What a crypto wallet is (and isn’t), and how it differs from an exchange account.
- Phishing — How fake messages and sites trick you into giving away your keys — and the red flags to watch for.
- Proof routine before you click — A simple 5-step check you can run before you sign, send, or connect anything.
- How to spot common crypto scams — The most common scam patterns, in one place, with examples you’ll recognize in your own feeds.
What is the MIR Seal?
The MIR Seal (Minimum Integrity Requirements) is NanaProof’s integrity and transparency standard for crypto educators and content creators — a practical, proof‑first trust signal, not an investment endorsement.
It tells your audience that you meet a clear minimum baseline for disclosure, ethics, and safety‑first communication, and that your status is verifiable and revocable via a public registry.
Who is NanaProof for?
NanaProof is primarily for digitally active teens and young adults who grew up on short‑form video, are curious about crypto, are sensitive to FOMO, and want fast, simple ways to stay safe. A secondary audience is parents, educators, responsible adults, and “late starters” who want to understand the basics of crypto so they can make more confident decisions for themselves and the younger people around them.