SettleMint
User management

Participants hub

Review users, entities, identity registration status, KYC evidence, holdings, activity, and security signals for every participant on the platform.

Use the Participants hub to review who holds platform credentials, which identities and contract accounts are registered, and what evidence is available before taking a KYC, identity, or security step.

The hub is split into three working areas:

  • Users: participants with platform credentials. The list shows each user's name, email, wallet address, participant type, linked identity address, and registration status.
  • Entities: participants without login credentials, such as assets, vaults, smart accounts, or other system identities. The list shows each entity's name, contract address, identity address, entity type, and registration status.
  • Insights: identity and claim metrics for administrators, identity managers, and claim issuers.

Selecting a row in Users or Entities opens a detail workspace. The workspace includes cards for KYC status, verifications, holdings, and a full event history view.

Decide where to start

Select the area that matches the record you need:

NeedOpenConfirm
Review a person with platform accessParticipants > UsersName, email, wallet, identity address, registration status, KYC state, holdings, security signals, and recent wallet activity.
Review a contract, asset, vault, smart account, or system identityParticipants > EntitiesEntity type, contract address, identity address, registration status, verification claims, data-feed state, and recent account activity.
Check system-level identity and claim trendsParticipants > InsightsIdentity registrations and claim activity before opening a specific user or entity record.

Users list

Go to Participants > Users to review participants with login credentials. The users table includes search, column-display controls, and export. A user appears as an admin, trusted issuer, or investor based on their platform and on-chain roles.

If your role can create users, the page also shows a Create user button. See Create users for the account creation workflow.

If you do not have permission to view users, the page shows an access-restricted state instead of the table.

User detail workspace

Open a user from the table to review the user's participant record. The header shows the user's display name, participant type, registration status, wallet address, and identity address when available.

The user detail workspace can include these cards and drill-down views:

  • Basic info: account details such as display name, email, wallet, identity address, and recent account activity.
  • Security: two-factor authentication and active-session data. This card is available to roles that can manage user security. For your own security settings, see Account security.
  • Verifications: identity claims associated with the user's on-chain identity.
  • Information: KYC profile status, approved name when available, pending-update state, and open requests.
  • Holdings: assets held by the user's wallet. The card uses the selected user's wallet as its balance scope. The card is available to platform administrators and to roles that can read users in the current organisation when the wallet belongs to a user in that organisation. A wallet outside the active organisation remains restricted.
  • Activity log: recent blockchain events for the user's wallet, with a full event view for deeper review.

The workspace can also show a setup checklist for identity and verification work. The checklist appears for identity and verification roles when the user still needs follow-up: identity registration, KYC verification, updated KYC data, or a re-issued KYC claim.

Entities list

Go to Participants > Entities to review participants that do not log in as platform users. This includes on-chain identities linked to assets, vaults, smart accounts, contracts, wallets, or system actors.

The entities table supports filters, column-display controls, and export. The list sorts by recent activity by default. If you do not have permission to view entities, the page shows an access-restricted state instead of the table.

Filter entities by type and status

Open the table toolbar filters to narrow the entities list in place. Two filter dropdowns are available:

  • Type: filter by what the entity is. The options are Wallet, Token, Asset, Bond, Equity, Fund, Deposit, Stablecoin, Real Estate, Precious Metal, System, Smart Account, and Contract.
  • Status: filter by registration state. The options are Registered and Pending registration.

Each option carries a count badge. The badge shows the number of entities that match within the current filtered set, so the numbers update as you apply or clear other filters. Selecting an option keeps only the matching rows, and the table keeps its recent-activity sort. Combine the Type and Status filters to answer questions such as which tokens are still pending registration or which smart accounts are already registered. Use export when you need the visible page outside the Console.

Entity detail workspace

Open an entity from the table to review its on-chain participant record. The header shows the entity name, registration status, contract address, and identity address when available.

The entity detail workspace can include:

  • Basic info: identity and contract-account details.
  • Verifications: identity claims associated with the entity.
  • Activity log: recent blockchain events for the entity's account, with a full event view for deeper review.
  • Data feeds: feed setup and publishing state for entities that take part in data-feed workflows.

Activity log evidence

The activity log is the participant-level view of indexed blockchain events. It helps reviewers answer: what changed, when it changed, which transaction recorded it, and which account or contract was involved.

Open Activity log from a user or entity detail workspace:

  1. Select the participant from Participants > Users or Participants > Entities.
  2. Confirm the workspace header shows the expected wallet, contract, or identity address.
  3. Open Activity log to review the full event table.
  4. Filter by event name or search for part of an event name when you need a narrower audit trail.
  5. Open an event row to see the sender, emitter, timestamp, block number, transaction hash, event parameters, and any decoded claim values.

The activity scope depends on the participant type:

Participant detail pageActivity scope
User detailThe user's wallet address.
Entity detailThe selected entity account address.

The table is backed by indexed events where the scoped address appears as the sender, account, contract, token, system, or an involved address. List controls include event-name filtering, search, timestamp-based sorting, pagination, and event-name facets. If your role cannot read the requested account's activity, the view returns an empty result instead of exposing another participant's events.

Share or bookmark a filtered view

The Activity log encodes your event-name filter, search term, sort order, and page in the URL. Copy the URL while a filter is active, and anyone who opens it sees the restored selection applied with the matching option shown as selected in the toolbar. The same URL also restores the state on a browser reload, so a narrowed audit trail survives a page refresh.

To hand a filtered audit trail to another reviewer:

  1. Open Activity log and apply the event-name filter, search, or sort you want the recipient to see.
  2. Confirm the toolbar shows the active selection and the table lists the narrowed results.
  3. Copy the URL and share it, or save it as a bookmark for repeat checks.
  4. The recipient opens the URL and lands on the same view, provided their role can read that account's activity.

Access still depends on permissions. The filter and sort are restored for everyone who opens the link, but each reviewer only sees the events their role is allowed to read for that account. A shared link never widens visibility beyond the recipient's own access.

Activity log evidence is useful for compliance review, incident investigation, and operational reconciliation. It does not replace the KYC evidence workflow. Use the KYC cards and verification views for identity documents, claim status, and approval or rejection history, then use the activity log to correlate later on-chain events for the same participant. Use the webhook events reference to check event names and payload schemas, and use blockchain monitoring when you need indexer or chain RPC health for the same period.

Insights

Go to Participants > Insights to review identity and claim data across the current system. The page is available to administrators, identity managers, and claim issuers.

The page shows:

  • total identities from the identity factory
  • active and pending identity registrations
  • current claim counts by status (issued, active, revoked)
  • identity and claim activity charts (trailing 24 hours or 7 days)

Use Insights for a system-level signal. Open Users or Entities for evidence on one wallet, identity, contract account, or claim subject.

Activity and audit evidence

Participant evidence is split by review level:

Review levelWhere to lookWhat you can confirm
System trendParticipants > InsightsIdentity creation, registration state, and claim activity trends.
User recordParticipants > Users > user detailWallet, identity address, KYC profile state, verification claims, holdings, and recent wallet activity.
Entity recordParticipants > Entities > entity detailContract or system identity details, verification claims, data-feed state, and recent account activity.
Full activity viewActivity log from a user or entity detail pageRecent blockchain events for the selected account.

Claims and activity shown in the participant workspaces are review evidence, not an automatic approval. If the evidence does not match the intended operating step, review the identity, KYC, or claim workflow before minting, transferring, or changing access.

Permissions and access

Participants views are permission-aware:

View or operationRequired access in the app
Participants sidebarAdministrator, identity manager, or claim issuer. Administrators without participant-management permissions see disabled navigation items.
Users listPermission to read user records.
Invitations tabOrganisation owner or administrator.
Create userPermission to create users, or organisation owner or administrator access to manage invitations.
Entities listPermission to list entities.
Entity detail workspaceIdentity manager or claim issuer access.
InsightsAdministrator, identity manager, or claim issuer.

Opening the Participants hub does not grant every participant operation. Creating users, registering identities, reviewing KYC evidence, and managing user security each depend on narrower permissions.

When an operation is unavailable, confirm you are in the expected organisation and that your account holds the relevant identity, verification, or system-management role.

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