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by olalonde 425 days ago
Fire issue is solved with multiple backups or titanium engraving. Theft is solved with secret passphrase that is either memorized or stored in a separate location. The $5 wrench attack (aka kidnapping and torture) is unsolved but it is extremely rare in comparison to the much more common key leaks/theft scenario. And I don't believe any defense is really possible against that one, cryptographically or otherwise.

> Identity Changes, such as name changes, are relevant in the Web o Trust/GPG world where you typically require a valid ID proof (such as a passport) and physical presence before you sign someone's keys at a Key Signing Party.

It doesn't solve that problem but I don't think "real life" identity is really relevant for the purpose of contributing code. In fact, plenty of open source contributors are pseudonymous.

1 comments

It’s kind of a solved problem too, Julian Assange even worked on a file system called Rubberhose - https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deniable_encryption
It's also a feature of crypto wallets like Ledger which allow you to have a decoy PIN that unlocks a throw away wallet.