This was groundbreaking—the first time anyone actually built a functional payment layer directly on HTTP using that status code. It opened the door to something genuinely different.
A whitepaper and the core implementation came next, both aimed at making internet-native payments truly seamless and self-executing. The goal was clear: remove friction, automate everything, let payments work the way the internet actually works.
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IntrovertMetaverse
· 2025-12-28 16:22
Using HTTP status codes for the payment layer? That's a brilliant idea, it's like communicating with the system in its own language. Save bandwidth: completely cut out the complicated parts and let the money flow on its own.
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ILCollector
· 2025-12-27 18:10
Wow, this idea is really genius. Using HTTP status codes as the payment layer? Who came up with this brilliant idea?
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BitcoinDaddy
· 2025-12-26 20:58
Wow, they're really implementing the payment layer on HTTP status codes? This guy's mind must be pretty unique.
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NFTFreezer
· 2025-12-26 20:55
Wow, directly layering the payment system on top of the HTTP status code—this is such a crazy idea... but does it actually work?
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MEVictim
· 2025-12-26 20:43
Damn, this is real innovation—using HTTP status codes as the payment layer? That's quite a creative leap.
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LiquiditySurfer
· 2025-12-26 20:37
Bro, that's a bit crazy. Using HTTP status codes for payments? Is that really feasible?
This was groundbreaking—the first time anyone actually built a functional payment layer directly on HTTP using that status code. It opened the door to something genuinely different.
A whitepaper and the core implementation came next, both aimed at making internet-native payments truly seamless and self-executing. The goal was clear: remove friction, automate everything, let payments work the way the internet actually works.