362b7e653c
Which affected all documentation files.
355 lines
18 KiB
Markdown
355 lines
18 KiB
Markdown
---
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title:
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Zooko’s Triangle
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...
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# Zooko Identity
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In a decentralized system with no trust anchors how do you figure out
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which name is the right one with any certainty. If you are texting to “Bob”,
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how do you know you have the right “Bob”? There are a lot of Bobs.
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Zooko’s triangle is the solution to this problem. It is explained in several places
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- [An Introduction to Petname Systems](http://www.skyhunter.com/marcs/petnames/IntroPetNames.html)
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- [Lambda for Humans: The PetName Markup Language](http://www.erights.org/elib/capability/pnml.html)
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Each identity, whether a human, a server, or something else, has a globally
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unique cryptographic identifier, which is not human readable or human
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memorable, a title or display name, which is human readable but not
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necessarily easy to type correctly or reproduce exactly from memory, a
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nickname, which is not globally unique, is likely to be unique among the entities that you are dealing with, but not necessarily unique, even among them.
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The petname is the name that your system calls this entity, not necessarily
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what any other system calls this entity, a name constructed by or your computer, typically constructed from, or identical to, the nickname.
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The petname is locally unique, human readable, and human typeable. It is how you know this entity and reference it.
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The computer is responsible for doing the mapping as needed, and
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makes sure that when you connect to Bob, you are connecting to the right Bob.
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Typically the globally unique cryptographic identifier is a public key, and
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only Bob knows the correct corresponding secret key. If the thing
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identified is an immutable data structure, the globally unique
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cryptographic identifier is a hash of that data, according to the hashing
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rules for that data type and data structure, which type and structure you
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very likely do not know and will not learn until you contact the system
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that has the data.
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# Zooko’s triangle today
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We now have a lot of systems that to a greater or lesser extent implement
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Zooko’s triangle, and while they are frequently incomplete and
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unsatisfactory implementations, they all do a sufficient job of making sure
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you are talking to the right Bob.
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The way it works as (more or less) implemented today (frequently less) is
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as follows:
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In private messaging, there are separate message threads for each public
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key, just as when you text on a phone to and from a particular person,
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there are separate threads for each phone number, unless you have
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manually associated two different phone numbers with the same identifier,
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and where the name appears in text in public or private messages your
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local computer should associate a unique local petname with each public key.
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And mostly they do, though existing software is frequently half assed
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about this.
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The petname is generated by mangling the nickname (and possibly part of
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the display name) down to a valid locally unique identifier, unique on your
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computer and following your computer’s local rules for valid identifiers,
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which rules might well depend on the language locale in which the
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computer is running.
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Existing software fouls up on the local petname issue in a variety of ways,
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but does a sufficient job to ensure that one person cannot impersonate
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another person
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The petnames appear in the text, and in the equivalent of reply-to and cc
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fields, as @petname, but if “petname” is a local petname corresponding to
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a public key that corresponds to the other party’s private key, it is colored
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differently to the text and/or looks like a link in html. If you hover over the
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link, you see the other party’s display name and nickname, and if you click
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on that link, you go to data about that person.
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What actually gets sent, computer to computer, when Ann mentions Bob
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in a message to Carol, is not the the local petname that that Ann typed into
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her text, but the globally unique identifier, which should be, and usually is,
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the public key or information uniquely identifying the public key, and
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possibly the nickname, the display name, and information on
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how to direct a message to that party.
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The display name is long, humanly meaningful, and usually
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probabilistically unique to humans, but inconvenient for typing in full in
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text, unlikely to be typed correctly, likely to be incorrectly formatted for
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reply-to and cc fields, and often likely to disrupt the flow of text were it to
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be directly typed as part of a paragraph.
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The nickname is a potential petname, or can be mangled into a locally
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valid petname without too much mangling.
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Display names and nicknames are unique on any one forum If one public
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key, one nickname and display name on any one forum. Different people
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can have the same nickname and display name on different forums on
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different forums. But if they do, if there is one Bob on one forum and a
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different Bob on another forum, they are going to nonetheless have
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different local petnames on your computer, and if one Bob sends you a
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private message, it will appear in a different message thread to that other
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Bob’s message thread.
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What appears in the address fields, and in references to particular people
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in the middle of a paragraph, is always locally unique, one distinct local
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petname for each globally unique public key.
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In practice, you don’t rely on petnames to distinguish people, though they
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are quite adequate for distinguishing people, but on the fact that the
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threading software associates messages coming from the same public key,
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just as when you see text messages coming from the same phone number
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on your phone, you see them displayed with previous text messages and
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replies to that phone number, and pay little attention to the phone number.
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In most contexts, you don’t actually need to look at, or even remember, the
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phone number, and you don’t actually need to look at, or even remember,
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the petname. You click on the “reply to” button, and the software fills in
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the appropriate local petnames, which become the appropriate global
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identifiers when the message is sent, and when the parties receive the
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message, it gets threaded according to global identifiers, and they see their
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local petnames for people. Same as with phone numbers on your text
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messaging application on your phone. No one needs to see phone numbers
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these days, and even less do people need to see public keys, and seldom
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need to pay attention to local petnames.
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# The full and correct implementation of Zooko UI
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All existing systems are half incomplete and unsatisfactory:
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> Bitmessage will never be popular, period. The common pleb
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> doesn't give a shit about privacy or anonymity or security, and just
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> happily uses Fecesbook. The slightly advanced computer user
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> uses the "more secure" instant messengers, that offer a proper GUI and
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> easy usage. The only people using bitmessage are literally some
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> groups of nerds, the unfortunate few, who have coriously stumbled
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> here (for a minute, until they realize what the public channels look
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> like), or trolls that need an outlet for their mental diahrea.
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>
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> As much as I think BitMessage is an interesting concept, you
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> cannot avoid realizing that it's massively unattractive for wide adoption.
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The Bitmessage UI is unbearable. What is needed for it to be popular is a
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full Zooko name system. With a full Zooko name system, it is going to feel
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much like one of the more popular apps.
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A Zooko name consists of
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- the Guid, the Globally unique identifier, for example the bitmessage Guid, "`BM-NB5cJuoFTkcmNEKDcBwn1RDxYDX3gGbq`", which represents
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the public elliptic point of a secret scalar known only to the sender.
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- the nickname, which is global and chosen by the entity named, but
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probably not unique, Many people can, and usually do, have the same
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nickname. The nickname starts with a letter, and is composed of
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letters, numbers, and underscore characters, for example "John_Smith".
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- The full name: The full name is likely to be unique, but only if the entity
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named chooses it to be likely unique, for example
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{John_Smith, Dark Lord of attack resistant cryptography}. The full
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name can be any sequence of unicode characters that does not
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contain unbalanced curly brackets, and the nickname is the first
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sequence within the full name of three or more alphabetic, numeric,
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or underscore characters starting with an alphabetic character.
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- The petname, which is the local name of someone else on your
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computer. This is locally unique, and defaults to the nickname, or a
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name constructed from the nickname, unless that petname already
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exists and names a different guid.
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When your system locally constructs a default petname from a nickname,
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it may mangle it in such a way that nicknames that look similar do
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not have petnames that look similar.
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When sending a message, you can reference a guid by the petname
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For example, if Bob's petname for John_Smith is John_Smith71 (because he already had John_Smiths one to seventy as petnames on his computer), but Carol's petname for John_Smith is JohnSmith, and Bob sends a message to Carol containing the the text
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> remember when @`JohnSmith71` said ...
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then this gets translated on sending to
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> remember when @{John_Smith, Dark Lord of attack resistant cryptography} #`BM-NB5cJuoFTkcmNEKDcBwn1RDxYDX3gGbq` said ...
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and when displayed to Carol, gets represented as:
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> remember when @`JohnSmith` said ...
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because the guid is already defined on her computer as the local petname JohnSmith.
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If it is not yet defined, then she sees the full set of Zooko names, as sent:
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> remember when @{John_Smith, Dark Lord of attack resistant
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> cryptography} `#BM-NB5cJuoFTkcmNEKDcBwn1RDxYDX3gGbq` said ...
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Petnames preceded by the '@' symbol get translated to the full Zooko
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nameset on being sent from the local context where the petname is
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defined, and the guid gets translated back into the corresponding locally
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defined petname on entering a local context where a petname is defined
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for the guid of that nameset.
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When receiving a message that references a known guid, the same guid
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always translates to the same local name, even if the nickname and
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fullname is different.
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The same guid can have many nicknames and full names, and the same
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nickname and full name might by used by many different entities with
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many different guids. But people should try to avoid that, by choosing full
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names likely to be globally unique, and nicknames likely to be locally
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unique on the systems of the people they communicate with.
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If someone maliciously chooses the same full name as someone else, in
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order to deceive the recipient of the message, the computer will see the
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guid, and assign him a different petname. To protect oneself against
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against people pretending to be oneself, one should choose a nickname
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likely to get a short and distinctive petname assigned on the recipient's
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computer.
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Everyone's system will record each association between a full name and a
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guid that is sees, the time at which it saw that association, and the guid
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asserting the association. If it sees a later guid claiming a nickname that
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corresponds to an existing petname, it treats this as strong reason to
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suspect the entity who knows the secret key corresponding to the guid
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making the assertion of scamming, spamming, and shilling. If it sees two
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different guids with the same full name, also strong reason for suspicion
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Two guids with the same nickname, weaker reason for suspicion.
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If you send a message to an entity defined by a guid, or add a guid to your
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address book, or if you compose a text containing a full Zooko nameset,
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perhaps because you are replying to a message that references an entity
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that has no petname on your system, you will asked to whether you want to
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store that full Zooko nameset under a local petname on your system.
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# Moving to a global Zooko system
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Zooko’s triangle is, among other things, a user interface concept for
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storing, managing, and communicating, cryptographic capabilities.
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Zooko’s triangle solves half the problem: provides a trusted path. If
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you trust Bob, and Bob trusts Carol, you can trust that Bob’s
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introduction to Carol will in fact bring you to the correct Carol.
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This, of course, assumes a browser is somehow able to use Zooko style
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links, rather than PKI links.
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The problem then becomes having large number of trusted introduction – a
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map between human phrases, and documents containing information about
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globally unique identifiers that are relevant to that phrase: Something
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like Wikipedia, but without centralized authority forbidding “original
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research”, aka any deviation from official government truth, and
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something like a search engine.
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To solve the problem of making Zooko style links useful, we have to
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solve the problem of providing global data that is not state dominated.
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Past experience with cryptographic capabilities is that if users are
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expected to consciously and intentionally use them, they screw up, that
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even experts screw up, and that end users are not only reluctant to use
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them correctly, but find it profoundly difficult to use them at all that
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even expert users find them a pain, as for example the regular
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unpleasantness of installing a certificate on a web server so that it
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can do https.
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Zooko’s triangle, correctly implemented, should hide from users that
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they are using cryptographic identifiers, or indeed any globally unique
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identifier.
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Because globally unique identifiers have become almost as ugly as
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cryptographic identifiers, we have already implemented interfaces that
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hide globally unique identifiers, for example the bookmarks folder, the
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buddy list, and the email contacts list. And since those identifiers are
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already hidden, they can be cryptographic, giving the user many
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benefits, and no extra grief.
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We can do this with not one extra click for security, and indeed will
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have to do so, for experience has proven that if we ask the user for
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extra clicks for security, the user becomes frightened and confused, and
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even supposedly expert users do not provide those extra clicks.
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In order that references to objects can be securely transmitted across
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trust boundaries, they need to be cryptographic capabilities
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You don’t want people sending you spam pretending to be your webmaster,
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or your email host, or your employer, or your bank. You want to share
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files with certain people, but not always with the entire world, you
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want to give some people, but not others, the ability to edit particular
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files. When someone trusted recommends a bank, or a firm, you don’t want
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some scammer connecting you to himself, instead of the bank you are
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trying to connect to.
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IM buddies, email contacts, and important web pages should be
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cryptographic capabilities. When you click on a link, it should take you
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to the web page the author you are clicking on intended. When you
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receive a message that purports to be from an entity you have a
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relationship with, it should be from that entity, and when you receive a
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message from an entity you do not have a relationship with, it should be
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obvious you do not. All messages should have in the headers “Regarding
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.....”, which refers to a particular capability to contact you – which
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usually is the particular capability to contact you contained in some
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previous outgoing message sent by you.
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Further, if we had a way of routinely and easily handling cryptographic
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capabilities, lots of things that are now inconvenient and unsafe, such
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as web money, could be made considerably easier and safer.
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# Monetizing a system of Zooko identity
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Information wants to be free, but programmers want to be paid. The
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primary reason for centralized name systems is that people can make
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money off other people's internet and corporate reputations.
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Names have value, when embedded in a network of names linking to
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names, because reputation has value. We can create secure pseudonymous
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payment using cryptography, but cannot create secure delivery of goods
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and services using cryptography. The other side of the transaction needs
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reputation.
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[sovereign corporations]:social_networking.html#many-sovereign-corporations-on-the-blockchain
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So the other side of the transaction needs to be authenticated by a secret
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that *he* controls, not a secret controlled by registrars and certificate
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authorities. Enabling people to own their own names is an important step
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towards enabling [sovereign corporations].
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Most of the value in the world is not in productive machinery and land. It
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is in “goodwill” – the value of names linked by names. And governments
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registrars, and so on and so forth keep skimming that value, and from time
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to time recklessly destroy it.
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But someone has to be paid for enabling people to own their own
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reputations.
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How do we make money out of enabling people and groups of people to
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own their own reputations?
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The easiest and most obvious way is if we issue the money that they use to
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transact on these reputations. Cryptographic transfer of funds is one half of
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the problem. The other half is wondering whether the person you are
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transferring it to will hold up his end of the bargain. Both parts need to be
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integrated.
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Reputations have value by being embedded in a network of reputations.
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Google made a lot of money by analysing the network and making the
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information readily available. My fundamental plan is that the keys used
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for identity will be rooted in the same wallet as the keys used for
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cryptographic coins, and thus communication carrying metadata about
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transactions rooted in that wallet, resulting in an intimate linkage between
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the crypto currency being valuable, and the information about reputation
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secured by the same wallets being readily available.
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And to make reputation embedded in the network of links from
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reputations to reputations valuable, we are going to eventually need
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network analysis systems similar to that provided by Google and others.
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First mover providing such analysis will have a substantial first mover advantage, as Google has and still enjoys to this day, but the first mover advantage is likely to be less valuable, since lots of search companies
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will simply add analysis of secure links, links rooted in secrets that are
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controlled by the owner of the name to their analysis of links rooted in
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government authority, rooted in certificate authority secrets answerable to registrars. On the other hand, being the source of the wallet software is
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likely to be a substantial and lasting advantage in being source of the
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network analysis.
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