Because I specifically do not want to use any public currency blockchain - I want an accounting method, not money. There many useful legal differences when the flow of money is the opposite to the flow of cryptographic keys. Read the doc.
Will read it! Thx for your response! btw: I really enjoy using simplex!
Uh oh blockchain run for the hills.
Why not say "we" instead of "I" and pretend there is a whole team behind nostr:nprofile1qqsvnx99ww0sfall7gpv2jtz4ftc9v6wevgdd7g4hh7awkpfvwlezugpz4mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuerpd46hxtnfduhs38wxc9 instead of just one person just a little longer.
From the doc "When the client wants to provision infrastructure resource [...]".
Clients don't provision infrastructure.
The software vendors root key is a single point of failure. Expect your detractors to feast on it in no time.
This won't work unless there's multitude of certificate issues and infrastructure providers accept a number of them. Not a problem unless you were counting on some sort of certificate monopoly to fund development.
"cryptographic primitive is close to gift cards, that have zero monetary value"
Gift cards are used as currency in all sorts of "unofficial" contexts.
With "zero knowledge proofs" do you have something like e-cash type blind signatures in mind? Because the Wikipedia page that you link to doesn't list that.
Btw also money is an accounting method, nothing else.
Confused why mention monero or other cryptocurrencies then?