Circle introduces Refund Protocol to enable dispute resolution in stablecoin payments

Date:

Share post:

Circle announced the launch of its Refund Protocol on April 17, introducing a non-custodial smart contract system to enable dispute resolution for stablecoin transactions without relying on centralized intermediaries. 

The initiative addresses what it labels as a key shortcoming of using stablecoins, which is the lack of a built-in mechanism for refunds or chargebacks.

The Refund Protocol gives payment arbiters specific powers while limiting their ability to control funds. Arbiters can lock funds for a set period, authorize refunds to addresses predefined by the payer, and allow early withdrawals for a negotiated fee.

However, arbiters are prohibited from transferring funds arbitrarily, maintaining the non-custodial nature of the system.

Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire said the Refund Protocol builds on the firm’s earlier open-source releases for confidential and reversible payments. He added that this is a step to enlarge the stablecoin payments presence in the mainstream.

The launch comes as Circle’s USDC became the default currency for all new users of Binance’s crypto-powered payment app Binance Pay.

Structure and functionality

Under the Refund Protocol, when a customer initiates a payment using an ERC-20 token, funds are transferred into a smart contract rather than directly to the merchant. The contract records the recipient’s address, the refund address, and the payment value.

In a dispute, such as non-delivery of goods, customers can request a refund directly from the merchant or through an arbitrator.

If a refund is approved during the lockup period, they can execute it without taking custody of the funds. Once the lockup period expires, recipients can withdraw their escrowed funds without arbiter intervention, provided no disputes remain unresolved. 

The system also supports early withdrawals, but only with the merchant’s off-chain signature, which consents to any applicable fees. Circle emphasized that while the Refund Protocol introduces dispute resolution to stablecoin transactions, several practical challenges persist. 

These include potential malicious behavior by arbiters, complexities in specifying refund addresses, gas inefficiencies due to individualized escrow management, the unproductive nature of locked funds, and current limitations in supporting contract-based wallets.

The company acknowledged that escrowed assets currently do not generate yield but suggested future upgrades could integrate lending protocols like Aave to monetize locked funds, potentially sharing earnings between recipients and arbiters.

The post Circle introduces Refund Protocol to enable dispute resolution in stablecoin payments appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Leave a reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

spot_img

Related articles

Bitcoin Remains Defiant Amid Escalating Middle East Conflict and Trade War Fears

Bitcoin hovered around $105,100 on June 14, down 0.22% over the past 24 hours as traders digested geopolitical...

How Donald Trump’s Meme Coin and Crypto Deals Rewrote His Billionaire Profile

US President Donald Trump has deepened his ties to the cryptocurrency sector, with digital assets, including Bitcoin, now...

Solana ETF Approval Expectations Surge as Several Firms Update Filing

Seven asset managers revised their applications to launch Solana-based exchange-traded funds (ETFs), submitting amended filings to the US...

What Happened in Crypto This Week: Market Action and News You Missed

Several major developments happened in crypto this week, including the fallout of a potential war between Iran and...