Erendil at aol.com (Erendil at aol.com) wrote: > We simply give each file (in an SSK/CHK) a timestamp (in GMT), then, when a > person access their SSK to upload, the nodes which receive the files briefly > compare the timestamp. The newer timestamped file overwrites the older > timestamped file in the data store, and when it is requested, the new file > will be present and sent.
Now you have two different versions of the same key in the network. When node C requests the key, you don't know whether it will find the old one on node A or the newer one on node B. > This is very similar to DBR (maybe the same, I'm not sure), but it allows > constant, all the time, changes. No, it's not. -- Greg Wooledge | "Truth belongs to everybody." greg at wooledge.org | - The Red Hot Chili Peppers http://wooledge.org/~greg/ | -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 187 bytes Desc: not available URL: <https://emu.freenetproject.org/pipermail/devl/attachments/20021127/8ccc824c/attachment.pgp>
