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Can you explain what do you mean with honeypot?

I definitely would like it (or something similar) to work. The commercial ridesharing platforms take a huge cut and they are starting to demand ID and selfie from passengers. I think that's too bad and dangerous.

Personally, I'm nervous to use a bitcoin-specific app that is connected to my real world location. Until bitcoin use is more widespread, it feels like using an app like this is asking for someone to mug you. Honeypot probably has more connotations with personal information, but I was thinking of it as a way of letting people who likely have bitcoin tell you exactly where they are.

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102 sats \ 1 reply \ @clr 4h

Thanks for the reply.

What I envision is that I would not just trust a "random" driver, but that this will work with a web-of-trust system. For example, in the Bitcoin Jungle there is already a mass of drivers and riders that use bitcoin. Riders could share feedback about good drivers which could be an indicator of trust. You could trust the feedback coming from people in your web-of-trust (i.e., follows of your follows or you can compute a trust score from your point of view in the network akin to the PageRank algorithm).

This has to be bootstrapped in each particular city/area with members of the community signaling already trusted drivers. It can happen at the local bitcoin meetup, for instance.

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Using web-of-trust could help. Regrettably, I think the way rideshare apps solve this problem is with kyc. Perhaps local community can solve the problem. It'll be interesting to watch.

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