Marcus grabbed a keyboard. He did the one thing a banker should never do: he typed a manual override into the SWIFT gateway—a command that hadn't been used since 2008. It was a brute-force instruction: CEASE ALL BUNDLE ACTIVITY.
“I’m saying someone recreated one,” Elena replied. “They didn’t break the lock. They built a perfect wax copy of the key from old system logs. This isn’t a hack. This is a resurrection.” clearswift bundles
For three seconds, the network hesitated. Two bundles—the original ghost and the decoy—claimed the same transaction ID. The ClearSWIFT AI, designed to resolve conflicts by comparing trust scores, began to spin. Marcus grabbed a keyboard
“Impossible,” Elena whispered, staring at her terminal. Her coffee grew cold. “I’m saying someone recreated one,” Elena replied
“We can’t delete it,” he said, fingers flying. “ClearSWIFT bundles are immutable once the smart contract is seeded. If we try to flag it as fraud, the AI will assume we’re attacking a legitimate bundle and lock us out.”