Citations:wallet name
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English citations of wallet name
- 2013, Ben Hammersley, Approaching the Future[1], Catapult, →ISBN:
- Although, it's not difficult to imagine that even if the Internet businesses settle upon a policy of tolerance, and we grow accustomed to multiple identities, there will still be instances in which their mishmash has to be disentangled and examined—if you are applying for a long-stay visa, for example, or a job. In such situations you have to provide a verifiable record of what you have done, and not done. How long before the authorities want to check not just your wallet name's criminal record, but also your online identities'? If I'm applying for a Green Card, it can't be long before BlueStilettos123 has just as much to prove as Ben Hammersley.
- 2015, Rebecca Tushnet, “The Yes Men and The Women Men Don't See”, in Austin Sarat, editor, A World without Privacy, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, page 120:
- Where, as in the fan communities I discuss here, communities of practice have grown up around pseudonyms, even people otherwise willing to use their legal names may choose pseudonyms, just to fit in.65 And the pseudonymous norm is enforced against other community members: people who publicly connect a fan's pseudonym with her legal or “wallet” name face social sanctions from other fans.
- 2017, Emily van der Nagel, Social Media Pseudonymity (thesis), Swinburne University of Technology, page 115:
- For wiredferret, even though most pseudonymity can be breached, someone using a pseudonym is an indication that the person does not want to associate their wallet name with what they are saying. They explain this is especially important for marginalised groups, who can use pseudonymity to take on markers of more privileged groups as a kind of protection.
- 2017, Kristina Busse, “The Ethics of Studying Online Fandom”, in The Routledge Companion to Media Fandom[2], Routledge, , →ISBN, pages 9–17:
- Meanwhile, citing a fan story and directly linking to its author's site may expose that fan to unwanted scrutiny — they may have revealing details in other posts on their blog that they don't expect more than a handful of people to read, or their wallet name may be attached to their web site.
- 2020, B. Dym, C. Fiesler, “Social norm vulnerability and its consequences for privacy and safety in an online community”, in Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction[4], volume 4, number CSCW2, , →ISSN, page 155:3:
- Tumblr’s default pseudonymity also supports fandom’s strong norms around pseudonyms rather than “wallet names” to identify one another [16].
- 2003, Moses Liskov, Silvio Micali, “Amortized E-Cash”, in Paul F. Syverson, editor, Financial Cryptography 2001, Springer, →ISBN, page 2:
- The first subcoin of each coin is common to the wallet: it specifies the wallet name and the number of coins in it, secretly embeds the customer's ID, and contains a compact description of all allowable second subcoins.
- 2018, David Kuo Chuen Lee, Linda Low, Inclusive Fintech, World Scientific, →ISBN, page 194:
- Its World Network Service (WNS) is designed to allow service providers, using any blockchain to replace the cumbersome public addresses provided to users (e.g., 1CpLXM15vjULK3ZPGUTDMUcGATGR9xGitv) with easy to remember, domain-style wallet names.
- 2021, Tani Hossain et al., “Designing and Developing Graphical User Interface for the MultiChain Blockchain”, in Ajith Abraham et al., editors, Intelligent Systems Design and Applications 2020, Springer, →ISBN, page 449:
- That is why, in the GUI system, every wallet is assigned a unique wallet name so that anyone can easily distinguish between the nodes without having to remember or identify the wallet addresses.