Injective @injective officially integrates the x402 standard, marking an important step in promoting rapid payments at internet scale, suitable for agent payments, new digital banks, and further exploration of on-chain financial scenarios.
Let's briefly talk about x402. The x402 is an open, HTTP protocol-based neutral payment standard that embeds payment capabilities more naturally into web interactions. It utilizes the existing 402 status code in the HTTP protocol to provide a more native payment mechanism support for the internet.
Originally proposed by Coinbase in May 2025, it supports instant payments using stablecoins. Its design focuses on statelessness, HTTP compatibility, and reducing development integration difficulty. In simple terms, when accessing resources that require payment, the server directly returns a payment request, the client completes the on-chain payment, usually using stablecoins, and can immediately receive the service afterward. The entire process requires no account, no API key, no redirection, and no intermediaries, truly achieving internet-native, pay-as-you-go, millisecond-level settlement.
x402 V2 Version:
1. Supports multi-chain + CAIP standards, seamless integration with EVM, Solana, etc.
2. Modular SDK, plugin-style expansion
3. Wallet-level identity + reusable sessions, no need to pay again each time
4. Supports dynamic routing, subscription-based, prepaid, multi-step payments, and other complex scenarios
@injective is a blockchain platform designed for financial scenarios, focusing on processing speed and multi-virtual machine support, committed to supporting the development and operation of various financial applications through efficient blockchain infrastructure. The ecosystem includes decentralized exchanges, derivatives markets, and asset tokenization tools, attracting considerable attention from developers and users.
In summary, Injective's integration of the x402 standard can provide support for scenarios requiring high-performance payments, balancing low latency and high throughput. This enables developers to integrate on-chain payment functionalities more easily into various web services.
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