> To break it down briefly, we have an open lookup standard based on > both the namecoin blockchain as well as traditional DNSSEC. (You can > choose your own adventure of using namecoin based names or traditional > ICANN names). Good, that's roughly analogous with what OpenAlias defines. We DO provide a service where we will register or host > names on your behalf. However if you follow the format and host them > yourself, everything will work just fine, and our open source lookup > server and libraries will provide those results exactly the same as if > the names were hosted with us. Also good, much the same as https://cryptoname.co and https://xmr.link > To that end, we have had conversations > with several companies in the space who intend to host their own > names, and we intend to work with them on the effort to ensure our > documentation is sufficient to ensure they can successfully do so. > > In terms of comparisons to OpenAlias, I think there are a lot of > similarities, but a few differences. First the similarities: > > > 1> We both use DNSSEC. > > 2> We both have the option of storing the address directly in the DNS > record. > > > Differences: > > 1> We do not use DNSCrypt. I understand why you chose to, but we were > concerned about broad interoperability and easy broad distribution of > hosting, so decided not to use it. We have other ways of achieving > privacy, using HD Wallets and Payment Requests. > And this is the part where you guys look really, really incompetent (and I don't mean that in a terribly demeaning way, it's just that you're in a space where you want to be a domain expert, not make a series of embarrassing and public faux pas). DNSCrypt requires NO work on the part of the alias creator, DNS server, SOA, or anything else. It is entirely client side, and allows for *private lookups*. HD Wallets and Payment Requests are inconsequential, an ISP still knows every DNS resolution their users are performing. When using dnscrypt-proxy to perform private lookups they are done against the 55 free and public DNSCrypt resolvers [1], provided by oVPN, OpenNIC, OpenDNS, okTurtles, CloudNS, and various individuals. OpenAlias links to and recommends four of these specifically, as they have the unique combination of providing Namecoin lookups, supporting DNSSEC validation for lightweight verification, and claiming not to store logs. Therefore, DNSCrypt provides encrypted, private, secure, end-user lookups with no implication on the creation side. That you are unaware of this (when presumably you at least read the Wikipedia article on the topic) and are not embracing it is quite surprising, to say the least. > 2> We have the option of storing a URL rather than just a wallet > address in the TXT record. This allows a second level lookup against > the URL to get back a unique HD Wallet address or Payment Request each > time, further protecting user privacy and security. Using Wallet > Names with Payment Requests allows for the user experience of typing > in an easy to remember name and getting back the "green lock" and who > the validated recipient is. This also provides an auto audit of the > end to end DNS SEC process, in the case the path were somehow > compromised, the signature on the payment request can provide an > additional check. > OpenAlias supports this as well, except it does it better by allowing the KV pairs to also contain a TLSA record before the request, which effectively makes it a DANE-secured interaction. Your interaction requires the trusting of multiple CAs, which is an inherent weakness. 3> We use a 2 tier lookup format. The first lookup returns a list of > currencies or payment types supported by the Wallet Name. The second > lookup goes to a record specific to that currency type to get the > address to go to. We believe this to be a more scalable solution in a > world where someone can have both multiple digital currency types, but > then also multiple types of colored coins, and wants a simple way to > share a single name for all of those different addresses. This allows > the wallet to do the work behind the scene of choosing the currency it > wants to send, and automatically getting back the right address to > send to, without the user having to do anything different. > We do the same thing, except in a single call. Here's an example of a record that has both XMR and BTC addresses: https://api.openalias.org/donate.getmonero.org?view=full (here are the DNS records for that: http://mxtoolbox.com/SuperTool.aspx?action=txt%3adonate.getmonero.org&run=toolpage ) > 4> We mandate DNSSEC while you make it optional. We did this because > we believe giving the user the option of NOT using DNSSEC is like > letting them order a car with no brakes. We weren't sure how we would > explain to them why their money was gone when they really didn't > understand the risks they were taking up front. We had a lot of > discussion about it before coming to the decision we did, and I can > see why you went the other way, although I do believe we made the > right choice. > With OpenAlias a DNSSEC fail is a soft fail, and the user has to confirm the address. The reasons are threefold: 1. At the moment only 83.5% of the TLDs are signed [2]. The unsigned ones include some biggies like .sg, .za, and .to 2. Even if the zone *is* signed, DNSSEC deployment is hard. Unmanaged DNSSEC deployment is out of scope for probably 99.9% of users, even the usually-technically-ok Bitcoin crowd. Managed DNSSEC is available, but is quite pricey. UltraDNS, Dyn, and GoDaddy (ikr?) are the three big providers, and of those three only GoDaddy has a consumer-affordable product. 3. ThomasV and I have done a stack of testing behind residential and commercial routers where DNSSEC simply fails (eg. the router runs a really outdated DNS server that doesn't provide RRSIGs in its response, or the ISP doesn't care about DNSSEC). Unsurprisingly, this can be fixed by...you guessed it...doing the lookup via DNSCrypt. Until we are closer to the bulk of all TLDs being signed, and DNSSEC becomes at least a little more ubiquitous, we can't lock out huge portions of the Internet, because then we're not really providing a useful and usable solution. All we can is make it more difficult to pay an unverified domain. Of course, if your aim is to force people to use you as a domain registrar, then it makes total sense why you'd lock people out;) Additionally, we just released another open source API server to help > with the "other half" of the lookup problem. Its in its infancy, and > we are certainly taking feedback on it at this time. It is called > Addressimo and will serve > unique HD Wallet addresses or Payment Requests for every lookup, thus > allowing a user to have a private, secure way to share a Wallet Name > that can be used to send them any digital currency. > Oh snap...https://github.com/openalias/openalias-api > I'd love to talk here or offline about merging standards going > forward. As an FYI, Verisign has also delivered a standard to the > IETF using DNSSEC to pass payment information here: > https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-wiley-paymentassoc-00 We have > started discussions with them about merging standards as well. > > > They actually have a really nice way in their standard to encode email > addresses that more or less ensures that there won't be name space > collision in the case that there is already a record "joe.user.com" > and you want to create one for "joe@user.com" that we are looking at > adding to what we are doing in the next update to our record formats. > OpenAlias (and your system) doesn't really have to worry about that, as TXT records can live side-by-side with A / CNAME / MX etc. records. More importantly, OpenAlias especially doesn't have to worry about it, because OpenAlias TXT records have a prefix: "oa1:" for OpenAlias v1 records. The risk of there being a legitimate TXT record that starts with oa1: and *isn't* an OpenAlias record is, well, pretty negligible. In any case, I'd much rather we had one effort going forward than > multiples, so let's talk! > I agree, and you guys are in an ideal position to change to supporting the OpenAlias standard (and enhancing it) without skipping a beat. We would definitely appreciate and take your input and efforts, and that would make OpenAlias v2 (oa2:) a standard built out in conjunction with Netki. Not only do you get Electrum support without lifting a finger, but it will go a long way to repairing your relationship with the open-source community at large, several proponents of which have taken great umbrage at what you were previously pushing as a closed-source, centralised system. Riccardo Footnotes: [1] - https://github.com/jedisct1/dnscrypt-proxy/blob/master/dnscrypt-resolvers.csv [2] - http://stats.research.icann.org/dns/tld_report/