Semi-Normal on Nostr: So... If you released some open source software and then inscribed the binary hash of ...
So... If you released some open source software and then inscribed the binary hash of the software on #btc, could future users always compare the hash of software they download to that immutable hash on chain? instead of having to download the sha256 checksum file from the same source and then try and confirm pgp key validity out of band?
Could make source file verification easier and perfectly immutable.
rot13maxi (npub1mxr…0htc) Published at
2023-02-16 16:44:54Event JSON
{
"id": "992a7a1c61c2dcbd028757746b55a89f08f90f679f78abff1c685da37b5b0dd5",
"pubkey": "bc445e748d24863a0dddb2c4b8fe796c49612ecb6f4bf63e7e9a97c28d6af4f2",
"created_at": 1676565894,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"p",
"d987084c48390a290f5d2a34603ae64f55137d9b4affced8c0eae030eb222a25"
]
],
"content": "So... If you released some open source software and then inscribed the binary hash of the software on #btc, could future users always compare the hash of software they download to that immutable hash on chain? instead of having to download the sha256 checksum file from the same source and then try and confirm pgp key validity out of band?\n\nCould make source file verification easier and perfectly immutable.\n\n#[0] ",
"sig": "c2c58311797611c1d63c562e7d2a435682756731d7081b2c0b3cb73590c35736013c831fbe1dee045d118cf0d86606e2ef7484f6f37e94dda73a5de9f9dedc9e"
}