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syzygyhack | 3 years ago
Yes, a blockchain gives you an (ideally) immutable foundation. No, that doesn't mean that every transaction that invokes a smart contract has to be immutable. If a smart contract for a particular use case needs to have the ability to "backtrack", so it can, there's nothing stopping it.
johnnymorgan|3 years ago
Needs backtrack, code it in, then everyone knows how the rules work and there isn't any side deals or exceptions.
Cheers!