As we ramp up to celebrate Monero’s 10th birthday, here’s an opportunity to get acquainted with Monero ID’s - easy and free!


TL;DR: Fill out the form at get.xmr.id/form.html to get your very own stagenet OpenAlias.


OpenAlias is great: You hand someone a simple domain name and their Monero client resolves it to a destination. No copy-paste, no QR-code scanning - just ready to send!

To make your life easier, XMR.ID provides this as a service.

Now with faster activation

Previously, setting up your “XMR ID” required significant manual intervention, that delayed the process more than necessary.

After a broad set of optimizations, new aliases are now typically ready-to-use within 15 minutes.

The new automations repect XMR.ID’s design goal of avoiding web-based self-service, thus maintaining the previous level of security.

Wanna play?

Before enabling this new method in production, we will test in on STAGENET - a parallel Monero network that works just like the real deal, but with its funds considered worthless.

If you haven’t used stagenet before, this may be a great opportunity for you to not only get acquainted with XMR ID’s, but create a risk-free playground for your own experiments!

It takes about 5 minutes. At the end you will have an account that can receive funds at <yourname>.stagenet.xmr.id, filled with some zero-value Monero, ready to be sent around.

To try it, simply fill in the blanks at https://get.xmr.id/form.html (onion). No ninja-skills required - and you may contact me about any issues or inconveniences you encounter.

Hackers welcome

Put your white-hat abilities to the test, fool around a bit, probe and report any faults or security flaws if you want to help harden this part of the Monero ecosystem - or just do a speed-run and get your alias.

Your stagenet-alias

This test is set to run for a week, starting today, but your alias will remain active afterwards.


Contact

Let’s chat in our Matrix room #xmr.id:monero.social or message me directly at @f:monero.social.

c/XMRID is our place in town. There’s also an email address. You’ll probably run into it as you go.

Talk soon, f

    • fullmetalScience@monero.townOP
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      5 months ago

      It’s from monero.graphics. It could use an extra dot, I agree :)

      The theme resonated - especially in the context of OpenAliases - as I consider more personal and memorable Monero destinations an important factor in the context of building parallel economies, human to human, thus making Monero “greater” through use.

  • lltnskyc@monero.town
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    5 months ago

    You might be providing this service with the best intentions, but, what prevents you from one day changing all of the records to your own address? Or changing a record whenever it is requested from “a-company-that-is-known-to-do-big-monero-payouts.domain”?
    Again I am not saying this is your intention, but Monero’s purpose is decentralized digital cash and I personally would not use such service for anything except maybe a convenient donation address that you don’t expect to get big payout to.

  • I set my OpenAlias up on my own by following instructions online, and it cost me nothing. Why would one pay you, an unknown centralized entity, for something that can be done in 15 minutes for free?

  • Synnr@sopuli.xyz
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    5 months ago

    Question. Does this somehow generate a new subaddress for every request? I ask because address reuse is dangerous for the privacy of monero. While most people don’t know this, I assume you do.