Headline: Over Foundation pulls the plug on Over Protocol — mainnet left running only if independent validators keep clients alive The Over Foundation has permanently shut down all infrastructure supporting Over Protocol, effectively abandoning core services and leaving the Layer 1 network to whatever validators choose to keep running its open-source client. In a terse announcement, the foundation said it will cease all operations immediately, discontinuing OverWallet, OverNode, OverFlex, RPC endpoints, block explorers and related APIs. The team confirmed there are no plans to recover or restart these services. The foundation attributed the decision to “insurmountable financial constraints,” but did not disclose detailed financials or whether token holders will receive compensation or a migration path. Over Protocol was built as a decentralized Layer 1 that emphasized accessibility—designed so ordinary users could run validator nodes and participate in consensus without specialized institutional hardware. With the foundation’s infrastructure offline, however, the protocol’s decentralization is now being put to the test. Block production can continue only if independent validators keep running the open-source node software; the foundation explicitly stated it cannot guarantee that will happen. The shutdown highlights a practical reality for Layer 1 networks: decentralization on paper often still depends on supporting services—RPC endpoints, explorers, wallets and APIs—that make the chain usable for developers and ordinary users. Without foundation-operated infrastructure, user access, dApp functionality and network observability face severe limitations even if validators keep producing blocks. In its final message the team thanked the community for its support and expressed regret at being unable to continue the project’s vision. The closure adds Over to a growing list of blockchain projects that have folded during the extended crypto market consolidation, underscoring how financial sustainability remains a core challenge for newer Layer 1s competing with established networks and deep treasuries. What’s next: technically, Over’s open-source client remains available and the network could limp along if enough validators remain active. Practically, however, developers and users will struggle without explorers, RPCs and wallets unless third parties step in to fill the gap. The foundation did not provide further guidance on token-holder remedies or transition plans. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news

