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Topic: BitMesh Networt sell your internet ? nice (Read 1089 times)

hero member
Activity: 728
Merit: 500
May 09, 2015, 10:00:15 AM
#5
I'd run this on my RaspberryPi2 ... this is a great idea!

Lets hope its a real deal.
newbie
Activity: 24
Merit: 0
I'd run this on my RaspberryPi2 ... this is a great idea!
hero member
Activity: 728
Merit: 500
Great idea

wish them huge success for the future  Grin



yea this is going to be so sick.
hero member
Activity: 722
Merit: 500
Great idea

wish them huge success for the future  Grin
hero member
Activity: 728
Merit: 500
BitMesh Network @BitMeshNetwork  ·  

Prototype demo coming Monday! Join our mailing list to see it first: http://eepurl.com/besozT


Bitmesh will revolutionize the way you share and purchase internet.

BitMesh is developing a platform to allow people to share their internet connection with peers in exchange for bitcoin while leveraging existing devices and internet architecture. Negotiation of the price of data takes place in a local "marketplace", achieving a fair price for internet without requirement for a contract or third party escrow. The end result is cheaper, more robust internet service and bitcoin in more people’s hands.

Our Mission

Provide a solution that is ubiquitous across all devices, platforms and locations. This includes a phased approach to integrating with handset devices, desktop systems and eventually networking hardware. The resulting product is decentralized with no necessity to communicate or interact with anyone to begin buying and selling.
FAQ

How far along are you?

    We have a working prototype. You can set up a BitMesh server on a raspberry pi and have multiple clients connect to it. It establishes micropayment channels (a bitcoin technology) between the server and client and uses a captive portal to titrate internet time given to the user based on how much the user has paid so far. The user simply sets a policy and goes.

Why did you pick this idea to work on?

    We set up a meshnet in our office one weekend. We were very excited about it and were plotting how to get downtown Santa Cruz on a meshnet, but were stumped on how to incentivize it. Coupons, bulletin boards, community chat, nothing seemed very compelling. We became more interested in bitcoin and realized that the micropayment channel technology could allow people to pay only for the internet they use at very high resolution. I'd worked on several bitcoin projects by that time and Andrew has a strong networking background.

    People use the internet all the time. They usually pay for it in big globs, and they can't resell it. Neighbors could save money by reselling their internet to each other. Coffeeshops could have a smoother on-ramp to their captive portals. We've lived through and are burned out on the contract based model for buying internet.
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