So basically jl777's SuperNET but hoping to entice more participation from more serious developers, and covering areas he has been weak in such as writing specifications, legal structure, etc..
More like the Altcoin board in Bitcointalk, but with less noise. Supernet is an exchange. Mints would be more like a marketplace, but without any auctions. Different exchanges could just be partners and have access to high quality launches (most Bitcoin fiat exchanges list Altcoins only very selectively, but that is how potentially the Altcoin market can grow by orders of magnitude).
Very few here are interested in slogging though endless technical and legal details. We are here to get-rich-quick with our lunch money. The fun is that this is game of chance, hope, and a healthy dose of aversion to needless "fundamentals".
Indeed, my concept is the opposite. Get high quality people and launches, have a subsection for trading and then filter spam. I'm pretty sure those who put their money in will benefit, since they have to read less and focus on factors that matter, and the quality of assets will be greater. If the Cryptocurrency grows by 10-100x, then there will be demand for people who want to put in serious money, but also would be more interested in some framework which makes sense in the longterm. Somebody who wants to launch a serious project doesn't need any army of people who want to double their 100$, he needs knowledge and capital. And there are people like that on this board. With regards to marketing securities, that's another topic. A mint might provide sensible self-regulation by decision of its members. Yes, currently at BTT anything goes, but the noise level is too high, so that people who know they are doing might have interest in a different format. Perhaps mint is not an ideal name. I mean mostly a forum for discussion and marketplace for related projects and activity. One thing a mint could do is issue an index on all the securities, so people can buy in into a number of high quality launches at once, similar to an index fund.