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RomePay aims to address privacy and security issues in the payment process. The platform's core mechanism is simple—each invoice is linked to a wallet, supporting cross-chain transactions, with end-to-end encrypted communication among parties, and permissions can be revoked at any time.
What are the benefits of this design? Participants perform their respective roles and can only see the information they need. There are no issues like publicly shared links being spread, PDFs flying everywhere, or shared folders being copied. For merchants, customers, and teams that need to protect transaction privacy, this is indeed a good approach.
The entire system is built around security and confidentiality, making it especially suitable for payment scenarios with privacy requirements. $RLC serves as the ecosystem token, playing a role in incentives and governance.
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Privacy payments are finally being taken seriously, much more reliable than those half-baked solutions.
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But how exactly does $RLC 's incentive model work? Is it valuable? That's the key.
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End-to-end encryption permissions can be revoked at any time. Wow, this completely kicks out middlemen.
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Basically, it's about solving the problem of PDFs flying everywhere. Classical payments need an upgrade.
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Will cross-chain become a new attack surface? Curious how they handle it.
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There are indeed many scenarios requiring privacy, but can ordinary people use it? It depends on adoption.
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Finally, someone understands that payment security is not just about passwords.
I like the idea behind RomePay—one invoice per wallet, this method of information decentralization is brilliant.
End-to-end encryption + permissions that can be revoked at any time—this is the security standard we should have, unlike some projects that just hype.
However, whether the $RLC incentive mechanism can work depends on subsequent execution; otherwise, it will just be another worthless token.
But how many merchants can actually use this system? Most people are still accustomed to traditional methods.
$RLC Can it get off the ground? It seems governance tokens all say the same thing.