Adding the image seems to have removed the original URL ... while maintaining the link's description. I suspect a bug (@admin?).
In any case, I've added an explicit link at the end of the original post.
Adding the image seems to have removed the original URL ... while maintaining the link's description. I suspect a bug (@admin?).
In any case, I've added an explicit link at the end of the original post.
For those seeking to trade more efficiently on the platform, I just published a tool for updating TradeOgre-orders from the command line: Terminal-Interface to TradeOgre
Curiously, most ended up preferring a less readable XMR ID, leaving many common and given names available.
Maybe this is because nowadays we tend to assume the good ones online to be taken - so it's actually a great idea that you point that out! Let's see how it affects the trend.
more aliases are available to register
This one is technically not true until you add Punycode support - and only if you manage to remain below XMR.ID's user count by that time :D
(Without Punycode, staying RFC-compliant, and applying XMR.IST's restriction of 30-characters max, we could provide roughly a count of 30^37-1-
, but even if we had a 10-chars limit, the number would still be unfathomable.)
Welcome to the space - it feels less lonely now!
In personal discussions, people of such credentials confirmed that they also just "trust the [academic] process" and "don't have time" to check the foundations of their convictions. And that they didn't know, but "there surely was someone specialized" who does.
More clearly, in this context, saying you trust your mate is equal to saying you trust your recorder that is replaying the cassette that someone happened to have left in it.
Personally, when I opened the link yesterday, I wondered if I was looking at a product for 4-year olds: Big round shapes, bright colors, ... and nothing that would give me a clue about what I am actually looking at.
I might simply not be in it, but who's the target audience here?
Oh. XMR.ID is not an email service.
Names simply resolve to Monero destinations to simplify payments for the sender.
The two formats whatever@example.org
and whatever.example.org
were chosen by the designers of OpenAlias, the set of definitions XMR.ID builds upon.
The animations in the website's screenshots-section show XMR ID's in action.
Note that the email address requested at signup is used by the system to send further instructions.
Could you lay out the scenario you are contemplating?
As it currently stands, I suspect Haveno will be in the same situation as LM, legally.
This is heartbreaking news. LocalMonero enabled anyone capable of navigating Ebay to convert XMR.
Thank you, Alex & the team, for all those years of providing what is probably the best Monero-service of all.
It does make sense that the tables are for Monero-exclusive applications. Loaded GUI's lead to user confusion and thus errors.
Think absolute beginner: "I installed that secure app you recommended and bought and happily transacted and now you say that wasn't secure?!"