Scope policy
Written scope first
Feature work, integrations, and production changes are tied to approved scope so runtime, treasury, and vendor boundaries do not drift without review.
Programming Service Policy
These policies explain how Mandate402 programming work is scoped, delivered, secured, reviewed, and supported. They are written to support implementation engagements in agentic commerce, treasury-control, and fintech-style integration environments where policy, auditability, and money movement must stay explicit.
Scope policy
Feature work, integrations, and production changes are tied to approved scope so runtime, treasury, and vendor boundaries do not drift without review.
Security policy
Client credentials stay in approved environment variables or managed secret stores. Real keys and facilitator credentials are never accepted through source-controlled files.
Delivery policy
Work is not presented as complete until the changed routes, code paths, and required checks have been run or any exact gap has been stated in writing.
Section 1
Mandate402 programming work starts from a written scope that defines the business problem, the goal, the responsible owner, the acceptance criteria, and what is out of scope. This matters because the product sits between operator intent, paid vendors, and treasury controls, so unclear requests create real delivery and trust risk.
If the client asks for work outside the approved scope, the request is treated as a change request. The provider may pause the new work until the change is written down with its expected impact on schedule, price, dependencies, and verification.
Section 2
Client access should follow the minimum level needed to complete the engagement. Demo data, test credentials, and staging environments are preferred until production access is necessary.
The provider may refuse to work from unsafe credential delivery methods, shared personal accounts, or environments that mix demo and production values without clear separation.
Section 3
The provider only needs enough client data to perform the agreed programming work. Sensitive operational information should be limited to what is required for debugging, testing, migration, or validation.
Logs, exports, and copied datasets should avoid real secrets and should not be kept longer than necessary for the engagement or for documented audit reasons.
Section 4
Work is delivered in small, reviewable slices whenever possible. Each slice should identify what changed, how it was verified, and what remains blocked or intentionally deferred.
A delivery is considered review-ready when the provider has completed the agreed implementation, run the relevant checks, and described any known verification gaps in plain language.
Section 5
The provider will communicate material blockers, production risks, and missing dependencies as soon as they are known. Clear status updates are part of the service because silence creates delivery risk.
Support after launch should follow the support window or maintenance agreement defined in the applicable order, proposal, or statement of work.
Section 6
Mandate402 may depend on third-party services such as hosted auth, database infrastructure, vendor APIs, x402 tooling, blockchain RPC providers, and oracle feeds. The provider can implement against those systems, but cannot guarantee their uptime or pricing.
When the solution touches Morph, x402 vendors, or other external infrastructure, the engagement should state which parts are under direct provider control and which parts are external dependencies.