I might as well throw in a word about Armory.  After our next release in
a couple weeks, we will be going full-speed at new wallets and BIP32
integration.  Just like Jean-Pierre mentioned, we'll be using parallel
trees to generate P2SH addresses after sorting the keys
lexicographically.  We plan to introduce the concept of a wallet
"bundle" (that name is far from concrete... I'd love a better word). 
All wallets in a bundle are protected by the same backup, and stored in
the same file.  The default behavior will be use new branches in the
same BIP32 tree when a user creates a new "wallet", though we will allow
multiple bundles in advanced and expert usermode (which is needed to
have watching-only wallets from a different seed created from an offline
computer).

However, we do plan to allow separate parties to create
multisig-intended wallets with public parts that can be exported and
combined with other users.  We feel this is critical, as it allows for
linked wallets in which there was never a single-point of failure from
key-generation to signing.  This is especially important for contexts
where employees may be handling a company's Bitcoins wallets.

On this topic, I have gotten a lot of inquiries into BIP 38 and 39.  I
was not clear whether those BIPs were worth prioritizing ... i.e. is
there a general consensus from a variety of wallet developers that they
should be supported?  Rather, I'm happy to start prioritizing them if
others do too, but I haven't spent much time trying to understand them
to even know if they're mature, yet.

-Alan


On 03/11/2014 08:29 PM, Jean-Pierre Rupp wrote:
> Hello people,
>
> We are working on some of this stuff. We had some very early draft on
> how we envisioned multisig happening. It is all implemented in Haskoin
> available as multiple repositories in Github. I am happy to see this
> gathering momentum.
>
> Our multisig system uses BIP-0032 HD wallets, and there will soon be
> BIP-0039 support for keys compatibility.
>
> Our wallet uses synced trees rooted at the extended pubkeys of the
> participants. Currently we are sorting public keys in the scripts to
> avoid ambiguity.
>
> Download haskoin-wallet:
>
> cabal install haskoin-wallet
>
> Check out the hw command (installed in ~/.cabal/bin/hw). Use importtx to
> bring transactions into the wallet. You must initialize first with a
> seed and create an account. It supports both regular and multisig accounts.
>
> Perhaps this can lead to interesting discussions on key exchange, and
> the appropriate handling of wallet metadata. I?d love to work on a
> proper standard that could lead us to compatible implementations.
>
> This document explains how we do it now:
>
> http://haskoin.com/~xeno/hd-multisig-wallet.html
>
> Cheers!
>
>
>
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