did-dht-method
ORCID-Source
did-dht-method | ORCID-Source | |
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2 | 10 | |
20 | 355 | |
- | 3.9% | |
9.3 | 9.8 | |
8 days ago | 8 days ago | |
Go | Java | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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did-dht-method
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9 Things You Didn't Know About Decentralized Identifiers
TBD is the company I work at. It's a business unit within Block. created its own DID method called DID:DHT. DHT stands for Distributed Hash Table indicating the use of Mainline DHT. You can learn more about DID:DHT via the spec and this blog post from TBD’s Director of Open Standards, Gabe Cohen.
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The Did DHT Method Specification 1.0
This is pretty neat, but you should publish a spec for Pkarr -- the layer below did-dht -- first. Right now Pkarr is a software program/library, not a specification. I think this will help you simplify and articulate your work more clearly to people who aren't immersed in it. I think it will also be extremely useful to people who don't need the incredible complexity of w3c DIDs.
The choice to sign an entire DNS packet seems very strange and probably hasn't been through through properly.
Why use DNS packets? Presumably because you want to leverage the existing infrastrucure of recursive DNS resolvers. However these resolvers do not preserve packets!. If I send a query to my recursive resolver, and it makes a query to the authoritative server, it can (and almost always does) modify the resulting packet from the authoritative before returning a reply to me.
The upshot here is: if you're signing packets, almost all recursive resolvers will destroy your signatures. This is why DNSSEC signs individual resource records instead of packets. I think that's what you want to be doing: sign an RR, not a packet. If you absolutely need to sign multiple RRs, you'll need to specify a canonical way to assemble the RRs (i.e. sort them). But I really think you want to sign a single RR, which includes the hash of other RRs.
Lastly, please take this issue more seriously: https://github.com/TBD54566975/did-dht-method/issues/80#issu... the only response given was that "the DHT-DID [spec] uses Pkarr [a piece of software]" which makes no sense... specs depend on specs, not implementations. Then the issue derailed (as unthreaded discussions always do... gee thanks github for ruining everything) into some side tangent about KRPC and CBOR instead of addressing "why DNS?".
ORCID-Source
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9 Things You Didn't Know About Decentralized Identifiers
Many organizations are working hard to answer this question. Some are going passwordless via passkeys. Others, like the Open Researched and Contributor ID (ORCID), implemented digital identifiers to associate publications, research, and open source contributions with a particular researcher.
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Ask HN: How to discover new and interesting papers?
Here are a few options to consider. First, Google Scholar. If you're logged into Google it will make a handful of recommendations on its front page. I've not really paid attention to how good the recommendations are. It says they're based on your Google Scholar record and alerts, so I guess you'll need both/one of those for it to work.
https://scholar.google.com
Second, Scopus from Elsevier (a company that plenty of people dislike). You'll need to create an account, and I don't know if non-academic accounts have the same access as academic ones. It has a new "researcher discovery" function I've not used so again can't vouch for its quality. You can set up various alerts apparently, although again I've not used them.
https://scopus.com
If an author is registered on ORCID you can check their works, but it doesn't appear that anything like RSS feeds are available, unfortunately. Plenty of journals have RSS feeds, but you'll have to hunt them down yourself.
https://orcid.org
Finally, you might want to check out other platforms and preprint servers, which might have better alerts etc. Try OSF, which hosts a bunch of preprint servers, and also provides hosting for documents and files that accompany published papers. However, it looks like there isn't much comp-sci stuff on there.
https://osf.io
I guess you could have a look at figshare.com too for similar reasons.
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Engaged, changing last name?
You will get an OrcIDto keep all the pubs associated with you.
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First publication - Does last name matter?
Get an ORCID- its there for this reason.
- Publishing under a pseudonym
- Физики не будут указывать российские институты в статьях об экспериментах на коллайдере
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Getting married close to thesis submission and graduation
Does your field not use https://orcid.org/
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Affiliation for museum at a university?
Hi everyone! I am a collections manager in the US at a state natural history museum that’s part of a state university, and I am a researcher. I’m hoping to get some advice on how you list your affiliation on various profiles and webforms if you work at a museum that is part of a university. Specifically, I was struggling with what to put for my ORCID profile, which feeds into Bionomia.
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Married academic couples, what did you do regarding changing last names?
Do what you want and get and use ORCID ids. It'll be required for federal funding soon anyhow. https://orcid.org/
- ORCID-Source: ORCID Open Source Project
What are some alternatives?
did-spec-registries - DID Spec Registry (Note)
update-center2 - Jenkins Update Center backend
arxiv-sanity-lite - arxiv-sanity lite: tag arxiv papers of interest get recommendations of similar papers in a nice UI using SVMs over tfidf feature vectors based on paper abstracts.
formatter-maven-plugin - Formatter Maven Plugin
docker-plugin - Jenkins Cloud Plugin that uses Docker
Codename One - Cross-platform framework for building truly native mobile apps with Java or Kotlin. Write Once Run Anywhere support for iOS, Android, Desktop & Web.
Apache Maven - Apache Maven core
Jenkins - Jenkins automation server
spotless - Keep your code spotless
jreleaser - :rocket: Release projects quickly and easily with JReleaser