Bitcoin Software to Utilize Tor Anonymity

Bitcoin isn’t anonymous, but the idea of an anonymous digital
currency has wide appeal. Core Bitcoin developer Mike Hearn
says he’s working on an interesting project to deal with
remaining privacy holes. Essentially, a piece of Bitcoin and the
Tor anonymity network will be “stitched
together
” in updates expected next month.

Bitcoin is pseudonymous, a step below anonymity. The public
ledger, or the blockchain, lists the details—the who, when, what—of
every transaction ever made. The
Bitcoin ecosystem
is a jumble of apps built on top of the
original network protocol. Some of these are powered by bitcoinj, a
Java implementation of the protocol that Hearn plans to tie to
Tor. 

The Tor anonymity network is software that funnels data through
relays and encrypted layers in order to preserve user privacy and
anonymity. Once Hearn makes the promised updates, all transactions
made with bitcoinj-powered wallets will be routed through the Tor
anonymity network, making the original data and IP addresses much
more difficult to trace.

Law enforcement will certainly denounce this project.
Control-happy regulators and
politicians
claim that an anonymous currency will merely fuel
drug purchases and nefarious criminal activities. Although,
criminals who want to remain anonymous would probably have an
easier time using cash.

There are plenty of legitimate uses for an anonymous network.
Hearn expects that the NSA has already “de-anonymized” the block
chain through IP tracking. Hearn
told
Forbes:

The fact I use Bitcoin isn’t a secret, but I don’t want
all my transactions in an NSA database. When I use Bitcoin in a
bar, I don’t want someone on the local network to learn my balance.
The way Bitcoin is used today, both those things are
possible.

Giving friends and family access to a running list of completely
legal purchases is obviously not appealing for many non-criminals.
Plus, in order for a business account to operate on Bitcoin, it
helps to shield competition from a list of every transaction the
company has made.

Transaction anonymity is a pretty popular idea. Other projects
have evolved to deal with Bitcoin’s anonymity “flaw.”
ZeroCoin, to be released May 2014, is a stand alone currency with
anonymous features built in. Dark Wallet, directed by the creator
of printable guns, Cody Wilson, is also in the works.

Although integrating Tor is a step for Bitcoin privacy, and
certainly is an impediment to eager snoops, imperfections remain.

According to
Coin Desk, Bloom Filters increase
transaction efficiency but “bleed a lot of information.” Hearn
plans to address this in future updates, but added that there is no
“silver bullet” to Bitcoin transaction anonymity.

Read more of the details
here
and
here
.

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