I prefer to leverage the signing of the (.) root in the DNS tree. The
amount of effort in signing the root holds more weight than building a CA
off the bitcoin blockchain.
If you want to associate identifiers for payment addresses I suggest
putting those in DNSSEC signed records in the DNS.
For r
On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 11:12 AM, Timo Hanke wrote:
> It's not about technical differences, but about the different use or
> purpose, which can result in different security demands. I argue that
> DNS has a lower demand in this respect than payment ids have. So DNS
> data can be in a chain with a
On Sat, Feb 09, 2013 at 07:01:48PM +, Luke-Jr wrote:
> On Saturday, February 09, 2013 2:33:25 PM Timo Hanke wrote:
> > namcoin tries to solve a different problem, DNS, whereas I want
> > to establish an identity for a payment protocol.
>
> What is the technical difference here? Namecoin ties n
On Sat, Feb 09, 2013 at 03:33:25PM +0100, Timo Hanke wrote:
> > Why don't you use namecoin or another alt-chain for this?
>
> Because namcoin tries to solve a different problem, DNS, whereas I want
> to establish an identity for a payment protocol. Your incoming payments
> will land on addresses t
On Saturday, February 09, 2013 2:33:25 PM Timo Hanke wrote:
> > Why don't you use namecoin or another alt-chain for this?
>
> Because namcoin tries to solve a different problem, DNS, whereas I want
> to establish an identity for a payment protocol.
What is the technical difference here? Namecoin
On Fri, Feb 08, 2013 at 06:01:08AM -0500, Peter Todd wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 08, 2013 at 11:03:54AM +0100, Timo Hanke wrote:
> > First, we have drafted a quite general specification for bitcoin
> > certificates (protobuf messages) that allow for a variety of payment
> > protocols (e.g. static as wel
On Fri, Feb 08, 2013 at 11:03:54AM +0100, Timo Hanke wrote:
> First, we have drafted a quite general specification for bitcoin certificates
> (protobuf messages) that allow for a variety of payment protocols (e.g.
> static as well as customer-side-generated payment addresses).
> This part has sur
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