Author: Alan Reiner 2014-09-23 18:45:39
Published on: 2014-09-23T18:45:39+00:00
The proposal of "No-Collision" mode for Multisig BIP32 Wallets aims to prevent accidental address re-use and make it easy to identify which devices were used for each transaction in the overall wallet history. This is achieved by assigning each device a different branch of the BIP 32 tree. Coinvault has a similar setup but sorts the pubkeys at each address. Justus Ranvier initially suggested naming this arrangement a "voting pool wallet," as that was the original application for this setup. However, Alan Reiner wanted to make the work public and requested Justus to recap/link the work to be part of the discussion. Currently, Monetas is implementing it in btcwallet. The BIP numbering process can lead to proposals being silently pigeonholed. This issue could be resolved by changing the naming scheme for proposals to not rely on centrally-allocated numbers.The email thread begins with a PGP signature followed by a non-text attachment. The attachment is a PGP key with a size of 14046 bytes. The next section of the email is an advertisement for an EventLog Analyzer that helps achieve PCI DSS 3.0 compliance. The ad provides a link to download a white paper and mentions the ability to comply with requirements 10 and 11.5. This advertisement appears to be unrelated to the rest of the email.The final section of the email contains information regarding a mailing list for Bitcoin development. The details include a link to subscribe/unsubscribe.
Updated on: 2023-06-09T02:40:11.830003+00:00