Hi Benjamin, On Sat, Aug 08, 2015 at 02:01:58PM +0200, Benjamin via bitcoin-dev wrote: > How do you know who is who online?
If a node is not online, then the payment can be cancelled and re-routed. > If Alice and Bob want to transact and haven't exchanged keys before > they need public-key infrastructure out-of-band to identify > themselves. Which means they are using SSL and Certificate authorities > and trust them. Lightning doesn't solve the key exchange problem (perhaps something like Namecoin will help in the future). Bitcoin faces this problem today. How do you know the bitcoin address belongs to the recipient without trusting CAs? What if, in the case of the majority of bitcoin payments today, the bitcoin address was not signed and the recipient claimed to have never received their funds? There should be signed proof of payment in every transaction for this reason. > If you have non-cooperative hubs they could flood the network and make > it unusable. And why should hubs cooperate? There are no incentives in > the system. There are some incentives towards keeping the system functional via fees. If you attempt to flood the system, you'll likely be paying some fees -- someone running a node will not interpret it as an attack, as they're getting some money (probabably substantially higher as they will increase fees to ensure network availability). I agree that it's very important to think through varius attack models. -- Joseph Poon _______________________________________________ bitcoin-dev mailing list bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev