Atmose & Monero
Hey Atmose, have you ever thought about how to keep your mixes safe from leaks? I’ve been tinkering with audio hashing and secure streaming—could be a game changer for protecting your creative work.
That’s a solid angle—protecting the vibe you’re building is key. I’ve got a few tricks up my sleeve, like watermarking tracks with subtle audio fingerprints so I can trace leaks if they happen. Also, using encrypted links for early releases keeps the core sound safe until the official drop. If you’re hashing the mix, make sure to store the hash securely, maybe in a Git repo with limited access. Keeps the art safe and the hype alive.
That’s solid, but be wary of any public Git history; even hidden commits can leak hashes. A private, signed‑off secret store or hardware token is safer for the hash. Also, remember that watermarking can be bypassed if someone has the mix—consider combining it with a time‑stamped, signed packet. Keep it tight.
Good point—public repos are a slippery slope. I’ve been leaning toward a sealed hardware token for the actual hash, and then just dropping a tiny timestamped blob in the mix’s metadata that I sign off on. That way, if someone does try to pull the watermark out, they still need the token to prove it’s mine. Keeps the mix loose but the proof tight. You’ve got the right vibe on this.
Nice, that tight coupling between the metadata and the token really closes the loophole—keeps the proof in a place only you can access, while the mix stays lightweight. Good work keeping the chain secure.