- Apr 2024
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arxiv.org arxiv.org
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Commonly, this is accomplished through a pub-licly available list of credential statuses (either listing the revokedor valid credentials).
Claims about one's identity (authorized devices), could be maintained by the quorum of these devices. Or by a quorum of one's devices and his friends.
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Local file Local file
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DL
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- Nov 2022
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webmonetization.org webmonetization.org
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Web Monetization
Web Monetization official site with motivation, wallets, providers, browsers, search engines, tools, documentation link, explainer link, specifications link, awesome list link, github link
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- github
- standard
- pipe web
- ilp
- moodle
- chrome
- wallet
- donations
- currency
- edge
- hugo
- w3c
- interledger
- 11ty
- gridsome
- specification
- coil
- explainer
- plugin
- infinity search
- protocol
- awesome
- gatehub
- jekyll
- puma
- documentation
- gatsby
- micro-payment
- uphold
- list
- ngx
- mojeek
- mozilla
- monetization
- ledger
- vuepress
- svelte
- tessy
- javasript
- motivation
- revenue
- money
- web monetization
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en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org
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Donations
To add some other intermediary services:
- ko-fi (site for contribution)
- GitHub sponsors (for GitPages)
- itch.io (for games)
- Gumroad (for sites and repositories)
- Patreon (for fan interaction)
To add a service for groups:
To add a service that enables fans to support the creators directly and anonymously via microdonations or small donations by pre-charging their Coil account to spend on content streaming or tipping the creators' wallets via a layer containing JS script following the Interledger Protocol proposed to W3C:
If you want to know more, head to Web Monetization or Community or Explainer
Disclaimer: I am a recipient of a grant from the Interledger Foundation, so there would be a Conflict of Interest if I edited directly. Plus, sharing on Hypothesis allows other users to chime in.
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- github
- exclusive
- stream
- wordpress
- pwyw
- gftw
- pipe web
- dev.to
- moodle
- payment
- tools
- ko-fi
- online ledger
- Consortium
- freemium
- hugo
- w3c
- revenue sharing
- pricing
- fans
- gumroad
- film
- coil
- open-source
- subscriptions
- contribution
- youtube
- jekyll
- WWW
- pay what you want
- gatsby
- tips
- pricing strategies
- games
- gratuity
- collective
- premium
- microdonation
- tessy
- gaming
- community
- revenue
- Patreon
- web monetization
- svelte
- micropayment
- web
- pay-what-you-want
- art
- extension
- donation
- open collective
- education
- wallet
- mozfest
- FOSS
- 11ty
- open web
- gridsome
- Interledger
- sponsors
- podcast
- payment pointer
- privacy
- browser
- protocol
- strategies
- plug-in
- gatehub
- nonprofit
- research
- business
- uphold
- API
- mozilla festival
- ngx
- video
- mozilla
- micro-donation
- vuepress
- monetization
- model
- open source
- open
- Interledger Protocol
- web standards
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- Sep 2022
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blog.griffin.sh blog.griffin.sh
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- Apr 2022
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Early modern scholars referred most often to merchants as exemplars for theirhabit of keeping two notebooks: a daybook (or journal) to record transactionsin the order in which they occurred and a ledger in which these transactionswere sorted into categories, as in double- entry bookkeeping
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- Feb 2022
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seths.blog seths.blog
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Okay, so what’s the blockchain? It’s a database. Unlike most databases, it’s not controlled by one entity and it’s not easily rewritten. Instead, it’s a ledger, a permanent, examinable, public database. One can use it to record transactions of various sorts. It would be a really good way to keep track of property records, for example. Instead, we have title insurance, unsearchable folders of deeds in City Hall and often dusty tax records.
This wrongly assumes that
- Permanent records are always desirable
- Accountability undermines corporations
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- Nov 2021
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docdrop.org docdrop.org
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Francesco Sacchini recommends two notebooks inDeratione libros cum profectu legendi libellus(Wu ̈rzburg, 1614), chap. 13, p. 91: “Not unlike attentivemerchants . . . [who] keep two books, one small, the other large: the first you would calladversariaor a daybook(ephemerides),the second an account book(calendarium)and ledger(codex).”
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- May 2021
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www.theverge.com www.theverge.com
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Blockchains make piracy more of a headache.
How so? Couldn't you just crosscheck the public ledger to verify the uploaders' info??
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- Feb 2021
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www.coursera.org www.coursera.org
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A distributed ledger is a database existing in many places with many people using it. Not all distributed ledgers have the encryption and verification standards of a blockchain. A blockchain is a specific type of distributed ledger,
distributed ledger
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www.coursera.org www.coursera.org
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Fifth, is the idea of the ledger of things. We're already seeing applications of this new Internet of devices and things. Soon though, most transactions will happen between devices and not between people. Consider the smart home, homeowners are adding smart devices such as thermostats and solar panels. Soon potentially, trillions of devices will be connected to the Internet. Doing everything from driving us around to keeping our house lit to managing our affairs and managing our health information. These devices need to be resistant to hacking. They need to be able to communicate value such as money or assets like electricity, peer-to-peer. Consider electricity, if you imagine that your neighbor's home is generating energy from a solar panel and you've got a device that needs to buy that electricity, then those two devices need away to be able to contract, bargain, and execute a payment peer-to-peer. It's not going to happen through the Visa network. It can only happen on the blockchain.
ledger of things
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- Nov 2016
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www.ledger-cli.org www.ledger-cli.org
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Un-fancy accounting.
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