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author | ng0 <ng0@infotropique.org> | 2017-10-17 17:22:36 +0000 |
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committer | ng0 <ng0@infotropique.org> | 2017-10-17 17:22:36 +0000 |
commit | e596da1ada6407bab97cd04fa7a5950081db1306 (patch) | |
tree | 27fb7ec95940fd4f01073c11d51d3fbe4f75e944 | |
parent | ff4c30d5417e4152db056b00188b63da07f1e4c8 (diff) | |
download | gnunet-e596da1ada6407bab97cd04fa7a5950081db1306.tar.gz gnunet-e596da1ada6407bab97cd04fa7a5950081db1306.zip |
+
-rw-r--r-- | doc/chapters/philosophy.texi | 10 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/doc/chapters/philosophy.texi b/doc/chapters/philosophy.texi index cb8787672..d2d1f9289 100644 --- a/doc/chapters/philosophy.texi +++ b/doc/chapters/philosophy.texi | |||
@@ -264,7 +264,7 @@ be useless), we must put ourselves as the receiver of replies that actually | |||
264 | go to other hosts; in other words, we must indirect replies. Unlike other | 264 | go to other hosts; in other words, we must indirect replies. Unlike other |
265 | systems, in anonymous file-sharing as implemented on top of GNUnet we do not | 265 | systems, in anonymous file-sharing as implemented on top of GNUnet we do not |
266 | have to indirect the replies if we don't think we need more traffic to hide | 266 | have to indirect the replies if we don't think we need more traffic to hide |
267 | our own actions.@ | 267 | our own actions. |
268 | 268 | ||
269 | This increases the efficiency of the network as we can indirect less under | 269 | This increases the efficiency of the network as we can indirect less under |
270 | higher load. | 270 | higher load. |
@@ -298,13 +298,9 @@ each peer. The identity for a peer is simply its public key, which is | |||
298 | generated along with a private key the peer is started for the first time. | 298 | generated along with a private key the peer is started for the first time. |
299 | While the identity is binary data, it is often expressed as ASCII string. | 299 | While the identity is binary data, it is often expressed as ASCII string. |
300 | For example, the following is a peer identity as you might see it in | 300 | For example, the following is a peer identity as you might see it in |
301 | various places:@ | 301 | various places: @code{ UAT1S6PMPITLBKSJ2DGV341JI6KF7B66AC4JVCN9811NNEGQLUN0} |
302 | @code{@ | ||
303 | UAT1S6PMPITLBKSJ2DGV341JI6KF7B66AC4JVCN9811NNEGQLUN0@ | ||
304 | } | ||
305 | 302 | ||
306 | You can find your peer identity by running@ | 303 | You can find your peer identity by running @command{gnunet-peerinfo -s}. |
307 | @command{gnunet-peerinfo -s} | ||
308 | 304 | ||
309 | @node Zones in the GNU Name System (GNS Zones) | 305 | @node Zones in the GNU Name System (GNS Zones) |
310 | @subsection Zones in the GNU Name System (GNS Zones) | 306 | @subsection Zones in the GNU Name System (GNS Zones) |