To send Bitcoin noncustodially, you ALWAYS have to get a "public key" from the recipient, through email or text or other-third-party-sender, where it could be intercepted. That is obviously more difficult, uglier, riskier
(continued below)
To send Bitcoin noncustodially, you ALWAYS have to get a "public key" from the recipient, through email or text or other-third-party-sender, where it could be intercepted. That is obviously more difficult, uglier, riskier
(continued below)
RE: LeoThread 2025-02-10 21:56