IN server know about OUT NAV address?
OUT server know about IN NAV address?
well sorry but i think this is not security. this is shit
if i own INserver and OUTserver i will know IN NAV address and OUT NAV address
I've been meaning to address this post. The reality is that whatever system you use, there is some trust. However there are usually levels of trust which most decentralised software providers offer end users. Easy to use options often entail more trust, but they also offer low level solutions for the paranoid. These levels of trust can be seen in the following example:
- If you use a prebuilt BTC wallet, you trust that it has not had some code added which skims BTC from your account.
- If you are not trusting of the prebuilt wallet, you can verify its integrity by checking its hash.
- If you are not trusting of the hashed prebuilt wallet you can download the source and compile your own wallet.
- If you are not trusting of the source, you can take the BTC core and build your own wallet.
Navtech will be the same when it is decentralised.
- If you are really trusting, you can add all available anon servers to you wallet config and your wallet will randomly choose which provider to use
- If you don't trust all server operators you can use the Official Navtech Servers which we guarantee are not recording information and will be running the exact code seen on the public github account.
- If you do not trust our word, the wallet will be able to accept a hash parameter and when it communicates with the server the server will hash the processing scripts your wallet will compare the servers hash to the hash you said is genuine.
- If you do not trust the hash response, you can download the source and setup your own servers and only use those servers for your anon transactions.
- If you do not trust our source, you can build your own source to process payments via the subchain however you like.
This is the beauty of open source software. The full details of this will be released in our Decentralisation Whitepaper.
I hope this answers your question for now. Great question by the way (even if it was posed kind of rudely)