GSCNX Official Announcement

Statement on Multi-Signature and Governance
Mechanisms for Long-Term Mitigation of Centralization Risks
Release Date: January 13, 2026
Applicable Contract: GSCNX Token Contract
Audit Reference: Centralization Risks in GSCNX.sol (GSA-02)

I. Background
According to findings from an independent third-party security audit, the current GSCNX smart contract design retains several privileged functions, including but not limited to:
•Trading enablement
•Fee and tax parameter configuration
•Anti-bot and transaction restriction mechanisms
•Liquidity management and AMM routing configuration
While such designs are often necessary in the early stages of a project, they inherently introduce potential centralization risks. Specifically:
If a single administrator private key were compromised or misused, system operations and market fairness could be adversely affected.
The GSCNX project formally acknowledges this risk assessment and has initiated a long-term mitigation strategy to address it at a structural level.

II. Long-Term Risk Mitigation Framework
GSCNX adopts a two-layer governance framework to eliminate single points of control through system design rather than reliance on personal trust:
1.Multi-Signature Governance Control
2.Governance Transparency and Public Disclosure
This framework is fully aligned with the audit recommendation of
“Multi-Signature + DAO (Long Term)”.

III. Multi-Signature Governance Structure (Implemented)
Multi-Signature Configuration
•Wallet Type: Multi-Signature Wallet
•Signature Threshold: 3 / 5
Scope of Multi-Signature Control
All high-privilege operations have been migrated to multi-signature execution, including:
•enableTrading
•Fee and tax-related parameter changes
•Anti-bot and restriction mechanism adjustments
•Liquidity management and AMM routing configuration
•All Owner / Admin-level authority functions
Governance Rules:
•❌ No operation may be executed by a single address
•✅ All actions must satisfy multi-signature consensus conditions

IV. Official Multi-Signature Address Disclosure
GSCNX Primary Multi-Signature Address
0xCb179cf0703C2923f266316cEa0f1d7E4B76571C
Multi-Signature Signers
Signer RoleAddress
Signer 1 – Super Consensus Hub Representative0x129A127C0927999a927aE9654A2B1947f142673b
Signer 2 – Security & Audit Representative
0x49fe1ea9cbb1b70e0bf3a88f12ba245b63c3a7d6
Signer 3 – Research & Laboratory Representative0xe0e919aB841d42C8A3C4058788F3E1AC7111Cd02
Signer 4 – Legal & Compliance Representative0x333904c4bff4ef5bb9b78abf1841851dd646dc7e
Signer 5 – Long-Term Ecosystem Representative0xE99238c4Ff9968116FC71232BA09Cae8f36690b9
Signature Threshold: 3 / 5
All signers operate independently. No single signer can unilaterally control funds or protocol parameters.

V. Transparency and Disclosure Commitments
GSCNX commits to the continuous public disclosure of the following information:
•Multi-signature wallet addresses and signer addresses
•Authority changes and governance upgrades
•Audit results and security updates
All disclosures will be maintained through:
•The official website
•Official X (formerly Twitter) announcement channels
•On-chain explorers (publicly verifiable)

VI. Official Statement
GSCNX does not rely on the “goodwill” of any individual to operate the system.
Instead, we choose multi-signature control and public transparency to structurally limit power and constrain human risk. This design decision is made for the long term, for audit readiness, and for institution-grade trust.

VII. Forward-Looking Plan
Following stable system operation and the completion of phased milestones, GSCNX may further:
•Decommission selected administrative privileges
•Introduce broader governance participation mechanisms
•Progress toward a Minimal Trust Assumption architecture