Right now at The COD Project, we're deliberately keeping the money flow switched off. Not because there's nothing to show — but because some things can't be tested on real people and real payments. Every value-exchange system runs into the same dangerous moment: the gap between "sent" and "confirmed." The action is already on its way, but the outcome isn't clear yet. That's where double charges, stuck states and manual errors are born — and where trust is lost. Over the last weeks, that's exactly the layer we've been closing. How the system behaves under uncertainty. How it recovers after a failure. What gets checked before a single payment moves. Where a human stop switch is non-negotiable. It's the slow path. Stability, safety and clear rules first — scale later. But I choose it on purpose: infrastructure that will one day handle people's money has to first prove it can withstand uncertainty. The COD Project is practical Web3 infrastructure for everyday value exchange. The first p
The most honest stage of a project isn't always the loudest
29 июня29 июн
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