Vistomail
Tokenized email. You write a message, and the act of sending it mints a token on Solana. The subject stays private — the tokenization is public.
#The name has history
On October 31, 2008, an email landed on a quiet cryptography mailing list: “I've been working on a new electronic cash system that's fully peer-to-peer, with no trusted third party.” It was signed Satoshi Nakamoto, and it was sent from satoshi@vistomail.com. Vistomail was the anonymous email service Satoshi used to announce Bitcoin and correspond with its first builders.
We reclaimed that name. Vistomail is now a place where the oldest primitive of the internet — the email — becomes something you can own, share, and trade.
#Why we built it
Every token launch today starts with a ticker and a meme. We thought it should start with a message. On Vistomail, you connect, claim a handle@vistomail.com address, and compose an email. When you send it, a token is minted on-chain and bound to that email by a content hash. The recipient gets a real email; the world gets a token.
- The subject is not public; the tokenization is. The email content stays between you and the recipient — only the fact that it was tokenized (and its on-chain proof) is public.
- Provenance, not just hype. Each token carries a hash of the exact message it was minted from.
- One click. Sending and minting are the same action — the token deploys and your optional first buy lands in the same transaction.
#Why Solana, Meteora and cbBTC
- Solana — sub-second confirmations and fees of fractions of a cent. A token launch should feel like sending an email, not signing a mortgage.
- Meteora Dynamic Bonding Curve (DBC) — every token launches on a fair bonding curve and automatically migrates to a full AMM (DAMM v2) once it raises its threshold. No presale, no team allocation games.
- cbBTC — Coinbase's wrapped Bitcoin on Solana is the quote currency for every token. Prices, market caps and the raise are denominated in BTC. It's a deliberate nod to where this all started: Satoshi's chain, as the unit of account.