This invite link is damaged
The part of the link after the # is incomplete or was altered, so this page can't read the invitation. Nothing was lost — ask the person who sent it for a fresh link.
Someone is asking you to be their kin
Their note, exactly as they wrote it — you'll have talked about this already. This page confirms that conversation.
What the role is
The sender holds bitcoin and wants you to be the person who can recover it if something ever happens to them. You'd hold a recovery key — it lives on a small device that stays with you. A timer guards the funds: as long as the sender keeps checking in, the timer keeps resetting and nothing can move. If they go quiet for a long time, the timer runs out and your key becomes able to move the funds to safety. An app walks you through every step, and a practice run proves it works long before it ever matters.
What it is not
- It gives you no access today — you can never touch the funds while the timer is running.
- It comes with no numbers — you won't be told amounts, and none are promised.
- It is not an obligation — declining is fine, and the ask came because they trust you, not to put you on the spot.
The commitment
About an hour of setup, the odd check-in, and one practice run. After that it stays quiet until it matters.
A signer is on its way
The sender is shipping you the small device the role needs — there's nothing for you to buy.
Check it's really them
These four words identify the sender. You'll see the same words in the app once you're set up — and if you're unsure about this link, call them and have them read the words to you.
Decline the invitation
Want to say why? It goes only to the sender, and it's optional.
You can change your mind — this invitation stays open until the sender withdraws it. Keep the link; accepting later works from this same page.
Next: put the app on your phone
Proof of Kin installs straight to your home screen — no app store needed. Your invitation travels inside this page's link, so it carries over by itself.
Or copy your invitation code. The app accepts it the first time it opens — the reliable path on every phone, whatever the install does.