How it really works
How it really works
Ethernal One records messages on a public blockchain. This page explains what that means in practice.
What happens when you create a record
You write a message You confirm and sign a transaction with your wallet The message is submitted to a blockchain network Once confirmed, it becomes part of a permanent public record
What "permanent" actually means
The content cannot be edited The content cannot be deleted The content may remain accessible indefinitely This permanence is a property of the blockchain, not the platform.
What we can and cannot control
We can: Display or hide content in our interface Add context or moderation labels Restrict access to parts of the platform We cannot: Delete content from the blockchain Modify a recorded message Prevent third parties from accessing public data
Visibility vs existence
A message may be hidden within the platform interface. This does not mean it has been deleted. It still exists on the blockchain and may be accessible through other tools.
Transactions and responsibility
Creating a record requires: A wallet A signed transaction Payment of network fees (gas) Transactions cannot be reversed once confirmed. You are responsible for reviewing the content before submitting it.
Public nature of the system
Blockchain data is public by design. Do not publish: Sensitive personal information Content you may want to remove later
In short
You write it. You sign it. It stays. Ethernal One What matters, forever.