IP transaction: Difference between revisions
Copy from old wiki |
m moved Ip address to IP address: Proper caps |
(No difference)
|
Revision as of 21:12, 19 December 2010
Sending bitcoins to an IP address is just a convenient way of sending bitcoins to a Bitcoin address along with additional information.
- You contact the IP address to find out if they're actually running Bitcoin and accepting IP transactions. If not, no transaction occurs.
- Your additional information ("from", "message", etc.) is exchanged with the server.
- The server generates a brand new Bitcoin address and sends it to you.
- You send coins to this address in the normal way
Unfortunately, the current implementation provides no authentication, so any "man in the middle" can intercept your Bitcoins during the transaction. When they see that you're sending a Bitcoin payment by IP address, they pretend to be the actual destination and send back their Bitcoin address. You end up sending Bitcoins to the wrong person. It's therefore not a good idea to send Bitcoins in this way, especially if you're using a proxy.
Receiving transactions by IP address is disabled by default because hardly anyone uses it. You can enable it by running Bitcoin with the -allowreceivebyip switch.
This article uses content from the old wiki. The list of contributors to the old page is available here.