It is not a court, not a legal arbitrator, and does not provide legal advice.
1. Role of the Protocol
Justly:- provides tools for human dispute resolution,
- enforces outcomes programmatically,
- and operates as neutral infrastructure.
- interpret laws,
- determine legal liability,
- or replace legal systems.
2. Arbitration vs. Legal Proceedings
Disputes resolved through Justly:- are not court rulings,
- do not constitute legal judgments,
- and do not replace formal arbitration unless explicitly agreed by the parties.
3. Jurisdiction and Governing Rules
Justly operates as a decentralized protocol. Disputes are governed by protocol-defined rules and smart contract logic, which act as the primary source of authority for resolution and execution. Unless an integrating platform explicitly specifies additional legal terms at the application layer, the protocol itself does not define or enforce jurisdictional law.4. Jurors and Responsibility
Jurors:- act as independent participants,
- express personal judgment based on provided evidence,
- and are not agents, employees, or representatives of Justly.
5. Compliance and Integrations
Compliance requirements:- depend on the integrating platform,
- the applicable jurisdiction,
- and the nature of the underlying transaction.
- identity and verification solutions,
- KYC/AML providers,
- and compliance frameworks,
6. Regulatory Scope
Justly does not:- custody user funds beyond protocol execution,
- provide financial or legal advice,
- or operate as a regulated financial intermediary.
- platforms integrating Justly,
- or users deploying it in regulated environments.
7. User Responsibility and “As-Is” Disclaimer
Justly is provided on an “as-is” basis. Outcomes result from:- independent human judgment,
- and protocol-defined rules executed automatically.
- assessing whether Justly is appropriate for their use case,
- understanding the economic and operational risks involved,
- and determining how dispute outcomes should be interpreted within their own legal or business context.
8. Transparency and Auditability
All dispute rules and outcomes are:- defined upfront,
- enforced by smart contracts,
- and publicly verifiable on-chain.
- auditability,
- accountability,
- and regulatory review where applicable.