keychat on Nostr: Current chat applications and email have forgotten that an address is not the same as ...
Current chat applications and email have forgotten that an address is not the same as an ID, treating the ID as the address. Emails and current chat applications send messages as [from: Alice's ID to: Bob's ID]. Regardless of how your geographical address changes, when Alice sends an email to Bob, it’s always [from: Alice's ID to: Bob's ID]. This compromises metadata privacy.
However, letters work differently; they are [from: Alice's current geographical address to: Bob's current geographical address].
Keychat separates the recipient address and sender address from the ID, and the recipient and sender addresses are also different. Keychat messages are [from: Alice's one-time address to: Bob's almost one-time address]. This makes it difficult for outsiders and relay administrators to determine who is sending messages to whom.
However, letters work differently; they are [from: Alice's current geographical address to: Bob's current geographical address].
Keychat separates the recipient address and sender address from the ID, and the recipient and sender addresses are also different. Keychat messages are [from: Alice's one-time address to: Bob's almost one-time address]. This makes it difficult for outsiders and relay administrators to determine who is sending messages to whom.
quoting note1h84…gse4In practice, when we fill out an envelope, we don’t need to include the sender’s information; we only need to write the recipient’s address, and there’s no need to write the recipient’s name. As long as the recipient’s address is precise enough, the letter can be successfully delivered. Not needing to write the sender’s information is equivalent to being able to write any random address. note13pu…6q2c