It would be nice to have a catchy name for .bit --> .onion resolution.
Tornames? (Just sent a mail to the Tor guys whether this is ok).
Onionnames?
?
Human Readable Tor/Onion Names - How to call it?
-
- Posts: 2001
- Joined: Tue Jun 05, 2012 6:25 am
- os: linux
Re: Human Readable Tor/Onion Names - How to call it?
Do we need a separate name? Right now I'm just calling it ".bit to .onion resolution"... I'm not sure that this feature needs its own catchy name.
-
- Posts: 541
- Joined: Mon May 20, 2013 12:03 pm
- Contact:
Re: Human Readable Tor/Onion Names - How to call it?
Technically doesn't bring something new but also doesn't cost anything to give a new name.phelix wrote:It would be nice to have a catchy name for .bit --> .onion resolution.
Tornames? (Just sent a mail to the Tor guys whether this is ok).
Onionnames?
?
However it could bring an additional marketing push, more popularity and more understanding for Namecoin from a different perspective.
People who are not aware of Namecoin but are frustrated by the unmemorable Tor addresses could understand Namecoin as a service which is taking care of their needs.
It is also a good idea to involve the Tor developers to find a proper name accepted by them also.
Thanks Phelix.
http://namecoinia.org/
Calendars for free to print: 2014 Calendar in JPG | 2014 Calendar in PDF Protect the Environment with Namecoin: 2014 Calendar in JPG | 2014 Calendar in PDF
BTC: 15KXVQv7UGtUoTe5VNWXT1bMz46MXuePba | NMC: NABFA31b3x7CvhKMxcipUqA3TnKsNfCC7S
Calendars for free to print: 2014 Calendar in JPG | 2014 Calendar in PDF Protect the Environment with Namecoin: 2014 Calendar in JPG | 2014 Calendar in PDF
BTC: 15KXVQv7UGtUoTe5VNWXT1bMz46MXuePba | NMC: NABFA31b3x7CvhKMxcipUqA3TnKsNfCC7S
Re: Human Readable Tor/Onion Names - How to call it?
It seems I won't get a reply from Jacob but: Oops, I just found they have an FAQ for this: https://www.torproject.org/docs/trademark-faq.html.en
So they are sissies and we should not use the syllable "tor" at all. Crap.
Certainly this is mostly for marketing. But from personal experience I can tell that if you give a task / project a name it also makes development easier and increases motivation.
Onionnames
.bit to .onion resolution (a bit bulky)
Gatenames (for i2p / freenet / etc., too)
Namegates
So they are sissies and we should not use the syllable "tor" at all. Crap.
Certainly this is mostly for marketing. But from personal experience I can tell that if you give a task / project a name it also makes development easier and increases motivation.
Onionnames
.bit to .onion resolution (a bit bulky)
Gatenames (for i2p / freenet / etc., too)
Namegates
-
- Posts: 2001
- Joined: Tue Jun 05, 2012 6:25 am
- os: linux
Re: Human Readable Tor/Onion Names - How to call it?
I would personally prefer that Dot-Bit get attention rather than a new name that we come up with that won't be automatically associated with Dot-Bit. Is it a problem just to say "Dot-Bit supports DNS for Tor hidden services!" rather than "Onionnames supports DNS for Tor hidden services!"? The fact that Dot-Bit has a large feature set doesn't make it a bad name to use for this, IMHO.phelix wrote:It seems I won't get a reply from Jacob but: Oops, I just found they have an FAQ for this: https://www.torproject.org/docs/trademark-faq.html.en
So they are sissies and we should not use the syllable "tor" at all. Crap.
Certainly this is mostly for marketing. But from personal experience I can tell that if you give a task / project a name it also makes development easier and increases motivation.
Onionnames
.bit to .onion resolution (a bit bulky)
Gatenames (for i2p / freenet / etc., too)
Namegates
Re: Human Readable Tor/Onion Names - How to call it?
I meant it the other way round:biolizard89 wrote:I would personally prefer that Dot-Bit get attention rather than a new name that we come up with that won't be automatically associated with Dot-Bit. Is it a problem just to say "Dot-Bit supports DNS for Tor hidden services!" rather than "Onionnames supports DNS for Tor hidden services!"? The fact that Dot-Bit has a large feature set doesn't make it a bad name to use for this, IMHO.phelix wrote:It seems I won't get a reply from Jacob but: Oops, I just found they have an FAQ for this: https://www.torproject.org/docs/trademark-faq.html.en
So they are sissies and we should not use the syllable "tor" at all. Crap.
Certainly this is mostly for marketing. But from personal experience I can tell that if you give a task / project a name it also makes development easier and increases motivation.
Onionnames
.bit to .onion resolution (a bit bulky)
Gatenames (for i2p / freenet / etc., too)
Namegates
Dot-Bit, featuring:
.bit domain names
Secure Namecoin TLS
Gatenames: Tor/i2p/freenet human readable domain resolution
Admittedly the bulky version works ok, too.