Digested-Tile 2024-09-12
Authors:: Bry B., Jonny S., and WikiWe contributors License:: CC BY-SA 4.0 Digest Root:: 6a1ab1901153
MarkdownTile
Digest Tag: Content-Addressable Mark and Tile Index
Digest tags are a crucial component of the Doc Seal Protocol, serving as both a tamper-verifiable stamp and a content-addressable index for tiles. This concept is inspired by content-addressable storage systems used in distributed file systems and version control systems. In the context of Doc Seal, digest tags ensure unique identification and integrity of the information digested at a specific point in time.
The creation of digest tags involves a multi-step process:
- Deformatting: The tile content is stripped of formatting (markdown) syntax while preserving the core information. This process enables consistent hashing regardless of visual styling.
- Hashing: A SHA-256 hash is computed for the deformatted tile. For efficiency, this hash is truncated to 12 characters, providing a balance between uniqueness and compactness [^3].
- Tag Generation: The digest tag is created in the format
#ds/{hash}/{YYYY-MM-DD}, where{hash}is the truncated SHA-256 hash, and{YYYY-MM-DD}is the digestion date.
This process is analogous to Bitcoin’s transaction hashing, but tailored for content management. It provides several key benefits:
- Integrity Verification: Any change to the tile content will result in a different hash, making alterations immediately detectable.
- Efficient Indexing: The hash-based tags allow for quick lookup, referencing, and retrieval of specific content blocks.
- Version Tracking: The inclusion of the date in the tag enables easy tracking of content changes over time.
- Authorship & License: The inclusion of authorship and license in the tile index can enable contributor attribution and IP protection use cases.
A concatenation of the digest tags within a document can be hashed to compute a digital fingerprint of the entire document without needing to expose the contents for first-level tamper-verification.
DeformattedTile
Digest Tag: Content-Addressable Mark and Tile Index
Digest tags are a crucial component of the Doc Seal Protocol, serving as both a tamper-verifiable stamp and a content-addressable index for tiles. This concept is inspired by content-addressable storage systems used in distributed file systems and version control systems. In the context of Doc Seal, digest tags ensure unique identification and integrity of the information digested at a specific point in time.
The creation of digest tags involves a multi-step process:
Deformatting: The tile content is stripped of formatting (markdown) syntax while preserving the core information. This process enables consistent hashing regardless of visual styling.
Hashing: A SHA-256 hash is computed for the deformatted tile. For efficiency, this hash is truncated to 12 characters, providing a balance between uniqueness and compactness [^3].
Tag Generation: The digest tag is created in the format #ds/{hash}/{YYYY-MM-DD}, where {hash} is the truncated SHA-256 hash, and {YYYY-MM-DD} is the digestion date.
This process is analogous to Bitcoin’s transaction hashing, but tailored for content management. It provides several key benefits:
Integrity Verification: Any change to the tile content will result in a different hash, making alterations immediately detectable.
Efficient Indexing: The hash-based tags allow for quick lookup, referencing, and retrieval of specific content blocks.
Version Tracking: The inclusion of the date in the tag enables easy tracking of content changes over time.
Authorship & License: The inclusion of authorship and license in the tile index can enable contributor attribution and IP protection use cases.
A concatenation of the digest tags within a document can be hashed to compute a digital fingerprint of the entire document without needing to expose the contents for first-level tamper-verification.
EOT
Digested-Tile 2024-09-10
Authors:: Bry B., Jonny S., and WikiWe contributors License:: CC BY-SA 4.0 Digest Root:: ce02c0f1ed72
MarkdownTile
Digest Tag: Content-Addressable Mark and Tile Index
Digest tags are a crucial component of the Doc Seal Protocol, serving as both a tamper-verifiable stamp and a content-addressable index for tiles. This concept is inspired by content-addressable storage systems used in distributed file systems and version control systems. In the context of Doc Seal, digest tags ensure unique identification and integrity of the information digested at a specific point in time.
The creation of digest tags involves a multi-step process:
- Deformatting: The tile content is stripped of formatting (markdown) syntax while preserving the core information. This process enables consistent hashing regardless of visual styling.
- Hashing: A SHA-256 hash is computed for the deformatted tile. For efficiency, this hash is truncated to 12 characters, providing a balance between uniqueness and compactness [^3].
- Tag Generation: The digest tag is created in the format
#ds/{hash}/{YYYY-MM-DD}, where{hash}is the truncated SHA-256 hash, and{YYYY-MM-DD}is the digestion date.
This process is analogous to Bitcoin’s transaction hashing, but tailored for content management. It provides several key benefits:
- Integrity Verification: Any change to the tile content will result in a different hash, making alterations immediately detectable.
- Efficient Indexing: The hash-based tags allow for quick lookup, referencing, and retrieval of specific content blocks.
- Version Tracking: The inclusion of the date in the tag enables easy tracking of content changes over time.
- Authorship & License: The inclusion of authorship and license in the tile index can enable contributor attribution and IP protection use cases.
A concatenation of the digest tags within a document can be hashed to compute a digital fingerprint of the entire document without needing to expose the contents for first-level tamper-verification.
DeformattedTile
Digest Tag: Content-Addressable Mark and Tile Index
Digest tags are a crucial component of the Doc Seal Protocol, serving as both a tamper-verifiable stamp and a content-addressable index for tiles. This concept is inspired by content-addressable storage systems used in distributed file systems and version control systems. In the context of Doc Seal, digest tags ensure unique identification and integrity of the information digested at a specific point in time.
The creation of digest tags involves a multi-step process:
Deformatting: The tile content is stripped of formatting (markdown) syntax while preserving the core information. This process enables consistent hashing regardless of visual styling.
Hashing: A SHA-256 hash is computed for the deformatted tile. For efficiency, this hash is truncated to 12 characters, providing a balance between uniqueness and compactness [^3].
Tag Generation: The digest tag is created in the format #ds/{hash}/{YYYY-MM-DD}, where {hash} is the truncated SHA-256 hash, and {YYYY-MM-DD} is the digestion date.
This process is analogous to Bitcoin’s transaction hashing, but tailored for content management. It provides several key benefits:
Integrity Verification: Any change to the tile content will result in a different hash, making alterations immediately detectable.
Efficient Indexing: The hash-based tags allow for quick lookup, referencing, and retrieval of specific content blocks.
Version Tracking: The inclusion of the date in the tag enables easy tracking of content changes over time.
Authorship & License: The inclusion of authorship and license in the tile index can enable contributor attribution and IP protection use cases.
A concatenation of the digest tags within a document can be hashed to compute a digital fingerprint of the entire document without needing to expose the contents for first-level tamper-verification.
EOT
Digested-Tile 2024-09-10
Authors:: Bry B., Jonny S., and WikiWe contributors License:: CC BY-SA 4.0 Digest Root:: c9bbd6b400c4
MarkdownTile
Digest Tag: Content-Addressable Mark and Tile Index
Digest tags are a crucial component of the Doc Seal Protocol, serving as both a tamper-verifiable stamp and a content-addressable index for tiles. This concept is inspired by content-addressable storage systems used in distributed file systems and version control systems. In the context of Doc Seal, digest tags ensure unique identification and integrity of the information digested at a specific point in time.
The creation of digest tags involves a multi-step process:
- Deformatting: The tile content is stripped of formatting (markdown) syntax while preserving the core information. This process enables consistent hashing regardless of visual styling.
- Hashing: A SHA-256 hash is computed for the deformatted tile. For efficiency, this hash is truncated to 12 characters, providing a balance between uniqueness and compactness [^3].
- Tag Generation: The digest tag is created in the format
#ds/{hash}/{YYYY-MM-DD}, where{hash}is the truncated SHA-256 hash, and{YYYY-MM-DD}is the digestion date.
This process is analogous to Bitcoin’s transaction hashing, but tailored for content management. It provides several key benefits:
- Integrity Verification: Any change to the tile content will result in a different hash, making alterations immediately detectable.
- Efficient Indexing: The hash-based tags allow for quick lookup, referencing, and retrieval of specific content blocks.
- Version Tracking: The inclusion of the date in the tag enables easy tracking of content changes over time.
- Authorship & License: The inclusion of authorship and license in the tile index can enable contributor attribution and IP protection use cases.
A concatenation of the digest tags within a document can be hashed to compute a digital fingerprint of the entire document without needing to expose the contents for first-level tamper-verification.
DeformattedTile
Digest Tag: Content-Addressable Mark and Tile Index
Digest tags are a crucial component of the Doc Seal Protocol, serving as both a tamper-verifiable stamp and a content-addressable index for tiles. This concept is inspired by content-addressable storage systems used in distributed file systems and version control systems. In the context of Doc Seal, digest tags ensure unique identification and integrity of the information digested at a specific point in time.
The creation of digest tags involves a multi-step process:
Deformatting: The tile content is stripped of formatting (markdown) syntax while preserving the core information. This process enables consistent hashing regardless of visual styling.
Hashing: A SHA-256 hash is computed for the deformatted tile. For efficiency, this hash is truncated to 12 characters, providing a balance between uniqueness and compactness [^3].
Tag Generation: The digest tag is created in the format #ds/{hash}/{YYYY-MM-DD}, where {hash} is the truncated SHA-256 hash, and {YYYY-MM-DD} is the digestion date.
This process is analogous to Bitcoin’s transaction hashing, but tailored for content management. It provides several key benefits:
Integrity Verification: Any change to the tile content will result in a different hash, making alterations immediately detectable.
Efficient Indexing: The hash-based tags allow for quick lookup, referencing, and retrieval of specific content blocks.
Version Tracking: The inclusion of the date in the tag enables easy tracking of content changes over time.
Authorship & License: The inclusion of authorship and license in the tile index can enable contributor attribution and IP protection use cases.
A concatenation of the digest tags within a document can be hashed to compute a digital fingerprint of the entire document without needing to expose the contents for first-level tamper-verification.