On 2011 December 15 Thursday, Walter Stanish wrote: > > Andy sounded very convincing when talking in favor of URLs. What's > > wrong with his proposal? > > A URI identifies a resource and is in effect an alias itself. > Identifying a resource is different from interacting with it. So, > while :// will work > sufficiently for the identification, it does not explain the > interaction. Quite so; the BIP15 standard shouldn't be setting the format of the URI; it should be setting what the format of the client-server conversation is. Effectively, what headers will a requesting client send? What headers should a server require? What will a server respond? > Interaction is a requirement, since there seems to be a widely felt > need to preserve anonymity through the use of temporary addresses. I think that's missing the point; any aliasing scheme is definitely reducing your anonymity, neccessarily so -- the alias has to be looked up somewhere, that somewhere reduces anonymity. If anonymity is what you want, stick with just a bitcoin address. The point of an aliasing server is surely to be able to give a single, unchanging, well known label to a transacting party, but still enable that party to generate a new address per transaction. I want my webshop to be able to say "please pay 3.20 BTC to https://mywebshop.com/payments/orderid=27282" to enable the automatic connection from orderid to bitcoin address (which my payment system can then monitor for payment receipt). (This is just one example). > Generating a temporary address requires some actual processing to > achieve, since the issuing of the new address cannot be done without > interacting with the entity hosting the wallet (unless I'm missing > something?). Well yes; but then the client has no idea what address to send to unless it connects to that URI... interaction/address generation is done when that connection is made. In short: I don't really think that this aliasing system should be concerning itself with preserving anonymity of the receiving party. That is almost certainly already gone (I'm hardly likely to send money to someone I don't know unless I like gifting random cash). The sending party loses a little anonymity because their IP is revealed when they connect to the aliasing system. But there is very little anonymity in a supplier-client relationship anyway (you have to say what goods you want, and where you want them, and you had to interact with a website when you were ordering already). Andy -- Dr Andy Parkins andyparkins@gmail.com