Although not perfect, and it may require visual/verbal verification, I don't see what the trust issue is. [image: logo] *Paul Puey* CEO / Co-Founder, Airbitz Inc +1-619-850-8624 | http://airbitz.co | San Diego *DOWNLOAD THE AIRBITZ WALLET:* On Thu, Feb 5, 2015 at 2:05 PM, Eric Voskuil wrote: > Hi Paul, > > The issue is in the establishment of trust. Anyone can broadcast the > initial information. > > e > > On Feb 5, 2015, at 2:01 PM, Paul Puey wrote: > > The broadcast is ONLY done when the wallet is in Receive mode. Same as > when the QR code is visible. The use of the *Name* section is specifically > so that a recipient can broadcast their name/handle. Not so the recipient > would broadcast the name of the Sender. > > On Thu, Feb 5, 2015 at 12:50 PM, Mike Hearn wrote: > >> I'm imagining myself walking around broadcasting my photo and MAC >>> address while hucksters push payment requests to me for approval >> >> >> I hate to break it to you, but you broadcast a photo of your face every >> time you walk outside ;) >> >> Bluetooth MAC addresses are random, they aren't useful identifiers. If >> someone can see you, a face is a far more uniquely identifying thing than a >> MAC. >> >> "Payment spam" might be a problem. I can imagine a wallet requiring that >> such requests are signed and then spammers can be blacklisted in the usual >> fashion so they can't push things to your phone anymore. Anyway, a hurdle >> that can be jumped if/when it becomes an issue. >> > >