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Philip Sheldrake
@sheldrake
We get the question: How does Addresso relate to ENS? Here's our FAQ response: Addresso and name services (NS) do different things. Addresso accommodates a future in which we all have many uncorrelatable wallets. Addresso has accepted ENS names since day 1, storing both the ENS name and the address it resolves to. Soon your Addresso will accept other name services too. It will flag whenever the NS name is expired, and also whenever the NS name resolves to an address different to the one(s) it resolved to before.
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Philip Sheldrake
@sheldrake
But even though they do different things, they both entail naming, and so this occasionally prompts further questions. I've drafted this comparison table in trying to answer that question. Is it clear? Am I missing anything? All comments welcome of course! Obviously it speaks to Addresso's qualities ... so I can add rows that speak to the qualities of DNS-like systems.
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Sayonara
@sayo
This makes sense but web3 has not permeated into my IRL that I have to save addresses like that but I understand the world in which it is needed!! But I also understand that it’s probably going to be like how email addresses are saved in contacts app alongside mobile numbers
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Philip Sheldrake
@sheldrake
Tx @sayo. Love your first sentence, obvs, so I'll pickup on the second. Storing mobile phone numbers on a mobile phone makes sense. You can call numbers and message numbers from the device. The context is simple, mono-dimensional, and almost always ties back to a legal / bureaucratic identity.
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