Open Merchant Payment Orchestration
Large merchants assemble open payment gateways, Bitcoin and Lightning acceptance, privacy-preserving payment protocols, bank-payment connectors, and independent fraud or reporting modules so payment routing becomes merchant-controlled rather than platform-controlled.
Thesis
Bitcoin / decentralization role
Coordination mechanism
Verification / trust model
Failure modes
- • Enterprise merchants may avoid fragmented payment stacks if integration, support, compliance, or uptime risk outweighs savings.
- • Open payment options may struggle with consumer adoption, refunds, tax treatment, and jurisdiction-specific regulation.
- • Liquidity, fiat conversion, fraud operations, and bank connectivity can recentralize around a few large service providers.
Adoption path
- • Start with high-fee, online, cross-border, digital-goods, or privacy-sensitive payment flows where incumbent orchestration is expensive or restrictive.
- • Expand by adding enterprise-grade support, observability, reconciliation, fiat conversion, policy routing, and compliance adapters around open payment rails.
Decentralization fit
8.0/10
Coordination credibility
6.4/10
Implementation feasibility
6.3/10
Incumbent pressure