There are plenty of hashers online. You can just google "sha hash
online" or something like that and there will be a bunch to choose from.
Just put in the original text and they should spit out the hash at you,
which you can then copy and paste.
On 7/1/2018 8:15 PM, Rebecca wrote:
I guess the announcer can't privately email anyone before the auction
because they could clearly use such information. I would prefer a non
SHA system though for reasons of agoran technical agnosticism/i don't
know how to use technlogy.
On Mon, Jul 2, 2018 at 10:14 AM, Rebecca <edwardostra...@gmail.com> wrote:
very good call.
On Mon, Jul 2, 2018 at 10:11 AM, Kerim Aydin <ke...@u.washington.edu> wrote:
Oh, and on the flip side, better make it a crime for the announcer to
reveal bids to anyone before the auction is over!
On Sun, 1 Jul 2018, Kerim Aydin wrote:
On Mon, 2 Jul 2018, Rebecca wrote:
Also
add in a new paragraph "Rules and Contracts notwithstanding, no
Announcer may ever bid on an Auction they are Announcing".
This is a massive disadvantage: It's unfair to ask an officer to
completely stay out of a subgame, especially because people choose
offices based on subgames they're interested in.
My suggestion would be something like: In the auction-starting
announcement, the announcer CAN include an SHA-512 hash of eir
bid. Such a bid cannot be changed and MUST be reported with the
auction results.
Failing to correctly and fully relate the results of an Auction as an
Auction announcer is the Class-9 Crime of Auction Obfuscation, and
Auction announcers SHALL NOT so fail".
So, um... any honest mistake and it's a class-9 crime?
--
From V.J. Rada