It’s wired into governance, policy, and accountability.
→ Actions only execute after governance intent → Limits are enforced by policy, not trust → Facilitators execute, but can’t override rules
What makes this different:
→ Governance decides what can happen → x402 decides when it’s allowed → Facilitators only execute within bounds → Every action is logged to an audit registry
No rogue execution. No silent transactions.
That’s how $Q changes the game.
x402 isn’t just execution. It’s governed execution.