Re: [Bitcoin-development] determining change addresses using the least significant digits

2015-02-06 Thread Wladimir
On Wed, Feb 4, 2015 at 2:23 PM, Isidor Zeuner
cryptocurrenc...@quidecco.de wrote:

 A possible approach to handle this issue would be to add a randomized
 offset amount to the payment amount. This offset amount can be small
 in comparison to the payment amount.

 Any thoughts?

Adding/subtracting a randomized offset amount is one way, but there
have also been more sophisticated ideas to obfuscate the amount, e.g.
by adding multiple change outputs or even distributing over multiple
transactions (potentially coinjoined for further privacy).

Mike Hearn had some ideas regarding obfuscation of payment amounts,
which still make sense, and he wrote about them here:
https://medium.com/@octskyward/merge-avoidance-7f95a386692f

Wladimir

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Re: [Bitcoin-development] determining change addresses using the least significant digits

2015-02-06 Thread Jeff Garzik
Yes.  You can certainly add additional inputs and outputs -- and as such
you can increase privacy and defrag your wallet at the same time.


On Fri, Feb 6, 2015 at 2:11 AM, Wladimir laa...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Wed, Feb 4, 2015 at 2:23 PM, Isidor Zeuner
 cryptocurrenc...@quidecco.de wrote:

  A possible approach to handle this issue would be to add a randomized
  offset amount to the payment amount. This offset amount can be small
  in comparison to the payment amount.
 
  Any thoughts?

 Adding/subtracting a randomized offset amount is one way, but there
 have also been more sophisticated ideas to obfuscate the amount, e.g.
 by adding multiple change outputs or even distributing over multiple
 transactions (potentially coinjoined for further privacy).

 Mike Hearn had some ideas regarding obfuscation of payment amounts,
 which still make sense, and he wrote about them here:
 https://medium.com/@octskyward/merge-avoidance-7f95a386692f

 Wladimir


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Re: [Bitcoin-development] determining change addresses using the least significant digits

2015-02-06 Thread Justus Ranvier
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256

On 02/06/2015 03:08 PM, Jeff Garzik wrote:
 Yes.  You can certainly add additional inputs and outputs -- and as
 such you can increase privacy and defrag your wallet at the same
 time.

A lot could be done to make regular spends resemble CoinJoin
transactions and vice verse.

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Learn how here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bakOKJFtB-k
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Re: [Bitcoin-development] determining change addresses using the least significant digits

2015-02-06 Thread Gregory Maxwell
On Wed, Feb 4, 2015 at 2:23 PM, Isidor Zeuner
cryptocurrenc...@quidecco.de wrote:
 Hi there,

 traditionally, the Bitcoin client strives to hide which output
 addresses are change addresses going back to the payer. However,
 especially with today's dynamically calculated miner fees, this
 may often be ineffective:

 A user sending a payment using the Bitcoin client will usually enter
 the payment amount only up to the number of digits which are
 considered to be significant enough. So, the least significant digits
 will often be zero for the payment. With dynamically calculated miner
 fees, this will often not be the case for the change amount, making it
 easy for an observer to classify the output addresses.

 A possible approach to handle this issue would be to add a randomized
 offset amount to the payment amount. This offset amount can be small
 in comparison to the payment amount.

Sending someone too much can really play hell with their accounting.
Unless you know they're okay with it, I wouldn't suggest it.

I often randomly round up the output when I'm paying to a depository
account... and I've thought that would be a useful feature to have,
but I dunno how to usefully present a UI for pay at least X but
you're allowed to round-up up to 0.01 BTC more.


Another strategy is this: create two change outputs, with uniform
probablity make one equal to your payment amount (which is also nice
because if your payment amount models future payment amount the change
will be usefully sized) or split your change evenly.

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Re: [Bitcoin-development] determining change addresses using the least significant digits

2015-02-05 Thread Peter Todd
On Wed, Feb 04, 2015 at 03:23:23PM +0100, Isidor Zeuner wrote:
 Hi there,
 
 traditionally, the Bitcoin client strives to hide which output
 addresses are change addresses going back to the payer. However,
 especially with today's dynamically calculated miner fees, this
 may often be ineffective:
 
 A user sending a payment using the Bitcoin client will usually enter
 the payment amount only up to the number of digits which are
 considered to be significant enough. So, the least significant digits
 will often be zero for the payment. With dynamically calculated miner
 fees, this will often not be the case for the change amount, making it
 easy for an observer to classify the output addresses.
 
 A possible approach to handle this issue would be to add a randomized
 offset amount to the payment amount. This offset amount can be small
 in comparison to the payment amount.
 
 Any thoughts?

Have you looked at Armory? IIRC they do this kind of stuff.

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165ecbd638ec09226f84c34d3d775d34ca5df4abfa8cb57c


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Re: [Bitcoin-development] determining change addresses using the least significant digits

2015-02-05 Thread Justus Ranvier
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256

On 02/04/2015 02:23 PM, Isidor Zeuner wrote:
 Hi there,
 
 traditionally, the Bitcoin client strives to hide which output 
 addresses are change addresses going back to the payer. However, 
 especially with today's dynamically calculated miner fees, this may
 often be ineffective:
 
 A user sending a payment using the Bitcoin client will usually
 enter the payment amount only up to the number of digits which are 
 considered to be significant enough. So, the least significant
 digits will often be zero for the payment. With dynamically
 calculated miner fees, this will often not be the case for the
 change amount, making it easy for an observer to classify the
 output addresses.
 
 A possible approach to handle this issue would be to add a
 randomized offset amount to the payment amount. This offset amount
 can be small in comparison to the payment amount.

Another possible approach is to randomize the number of change outputs
from transaction to transaction.

Doing this, it would be possible to make change outputs that mimic
real spends (low number of s.d.)

- -- 
Support online privacy by using email encryption whenever possible.
Learn how here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bakOKJFtB-k
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[Bitcoin-development] determining change addresses using the least significant digits

2015-02-04 Thread Isidor Zeuner
Hi there,

traditionally, the Bitcoin client strives to hide which output
addresses are change addresses going back to the payer. However,
especially with today's dynamically calculated miner fees, this
may often be ineffective:

A user sending a payment using the Bitcoin client will usually enter
the payment amount only up to the number of digits which are
considered to be significant enough. So, the least significant digits
will often be zero for the payment. With dynamically calculated miner
fees, this will often not be the case for the change amount, making it
easy for an observer to classify the output addresses.

A possible approach to handle this issue would be to add a randomized
offset amount to the payment amount. This offset amount can be small
in comparison to the payment amount.

Any thoughts?

Best regards,

Isidor

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