The changelog
The catalog doesn't change in silence. Every meaningful move — what was added, where a rate or limit shifted, what was paused — is written down with a date. This page is the public face of that habit; the dated record itself runs on the feed.
The kinds of change, not the list of them
Here is what is recorded. The dated entries themselves open on the feed.
Additions
When something new joins the catalog.
Rate and limits
When a tool's rate or its min and max move.
Pauses and returns
When something is paused or switched back on.
Always dated
Every entry carries the date it happened.
About the changelog
Keeping a log is a habit, not a module. Every meaningful move in the catalog is written down with a date; this page is the public side of that habit, while the dated, searchable trail itself runs on the feed inside the account. That's why there is no list of entries here — much as the external catalog does not lay out its list of tools.
There is a reason to keep it in the open. A catalog that changes quietly asks to be taken on faith; a catalog that records its changes can be checked — and we prefer the latter. What you won't find is a scoreboard: no turnover, no "millions delivered", only the plain record of what moved and when.
What is the changelog?
A dated record of catalog changes — what changed and when.
Where are the actual entries?
On the updates feed inside your account; this public page describes the practice rather than listing it out.
What kinds of change are logged?
Additions, rate and limit shifts, pauses and returns — each with a date.
Why keep it public?
So the catalog's state can be checked rather than taken on faith.
Do I need an account?
Yes — the full dated feed opens inside your account; this summary and the live counts stay public.
What are the numbers in the card?
They are about the platform — tools live, days online, status — counted in real time.
See what has moved
The dated feed of changes is one click away; an account opens up working with the catalog.