Hi everyone
I’ve noticed a bit of confusion around the CMTE integration modules for LFMTE platforms, so I’d like to clarify how they fit into the bigger picture.
There appears to be a misunderstanding that CMTE has an “owner.” That’s not how it works. CMTE is community-driven and decentralized, not controlled by a single individual or company. It doesn’t operate under one central reward system like the usual setup. Any owner can acquire CMTE and distribute it however they choose. That flexibility is intentional and is part of what makes it different.
To make CMTE practical within LFMTE platforms, integration modules were developed. As outlined in the official announcement, “Endgame: Full CMTE Integration for LFMTE Platforms” (June 9, 2025), one module automates reward allocation and payouts within LFMTE. This module is already available and allows CMTE to be used as a payout option inside LFMTE. We are also working on an additional payment gateway module. This was more technical than expected, but it will be available soon.
You can read the full announcement here:
https://cmtecoin.com/2025/06/09/endgame-full-cmte-integration-for-lfmte-platforms/
These modules are simply tools. They standardize tracking, automate distribution, and allow proper wallet payouts. They do not represent ownership of CMTE, and they do not centralize it. They just make it easier for owners to use CMTE in a structured and reliable way.
Sites using the integration module may display a partner platform badge to indicate technical compatibility. This does not represent ownership or central control of CMTE. It simply signals that the standardized module is being used.
The programmer owns the modules and handles the technical side. The roles and pricing are transparently listed in the announcement, and payments go directly to him for development and support. Programmers do not work for free, and the cost simply covers the work being done, including the ongoing development of new functionality.
I am simply a traffic exchange owner who saw the potential early and understood what was needed on a practical level. I shared that perspective and coordinate where needed, including helping guide development on the payment module.
It’s also worth mentioning, in the spirit of community collaboration, that CMTE is being used in different ways by different owners. That’s actually one of the strengths of a community-driven project like this. It isn’t about one person controlling everything. It’s about people contributing in ways that fit their own platforms and ideas.
For example, one owner is integrating CMTE on his sites using his own programming approach. Another version was developed specifically for mailers running on the NS script. Different owners, different implementations, same underlying token.
That’s really the nature of a decentralized system. It grows because people build around it, adapt it, and contribute to it in their own way.
Even the game I created relies on the module purely for standardized tracking and automated crediting. Without that layer, it would not function properly.
At the end of the day, this is about cooperation, steady growth, and giving owners and members more flexibility within the industry.
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