Sometimes you suddenly realize one thing: the on-chain world has become fast enough, but many things remain unclear.


Assets flow on-chain, protocols run on-chain, yet once disputes, vulnerabilities, or execution disagreements arise, an invisible gap emerges between the real world and on-chain rules.
Recently while observing @RiverdotInc and @River4fun, I've had quite an intuitive feeling that what they're trying to solve isn't trading efficiency, nor purely financial innovation—it's the on-chain order problem that many people overlook.
In traditional finance, arbitration, law, and execution are part of the infrastructure foundation, but in Web3, we often default to believing code is everything. The problem is that when code encounters the complexity of the real world, smart contracts alone are often insufficient.
What River is doing is essentially building a bridge between on-chain and reality. It focuses on smart contract disputes, on-chain arbitration, and enforceable dispute resolution mechanisms, allowing the decentralized world not only to operate, but to be reasonably resolved when problems occur.
As the ecosystem grows larger and assets increase, what truly matters isn't never having problems, but having a reasonable solution when problems do arise.
Perhaps many people haven't realized this yet, but as Web3 scales up, infrastructure like River might become the true safety net of the on-chain world.
$RIVER $RiverPts @Galxe @River4fun @RiverdotInc @easydotfunX @wallchain #Ad #Affiliate
原文表示
post-image
このページには第三者のコンテンツが含まれている場合があり、情報提供のみを目的としております(表明・保証をするものではありません)。Gateによる見解の支持や、金融・専門的な助言とみなされるべきものではありません。詳細については免責事項をご覧ください。
  • 報酬
  • コメント
  • リポスト
  • 共有
コメント
コメントを追加
コメントを追加
コメントなし
  • ピン