Transaction

56edbbc493f52c3b2c6a9b566a84b3ef451ae4c791dd35d0e6f7e373f76d23fe
2024-03-25 00:05:42
0.00000011 BSV
(
0.00515320 BSV
-
0.00515309 BSV
)
10.19 sat/KB
1
74,054
1,079 B

2 Outputs

Total Output:
0.00515309 BSV
  • j"1LAnZuoQdcKCkpDBKQMCgziGMoPC4VQUckM;<div class="post">When you send to a bitcoin address, you don't connect to the recipient.&nbsp; You send the transaction to the network the same way you relay transactions.&nbsp; There's no distinction between a transaction you originated and one you received from another node that you're relaying in a broadcast.&nbsp; With a very small network though, someone might still figure it out by process of elimination.&nbsp; It'll be better when the network is larger.<br/><br/>If you send by IP, the recipient sees you because you connect to their IP.&nbsp; You could use TOR to mask that.<br/><br/>You could use TOR if you don't want anyone to know you're even using Bitcoin.<br/><br/>Bitcoin is still very new and has not been independently analysed.&nbsp; If you're serious about privacy, TOR is an advisable precaution.</div> text/html
    https://whatsonchain.com/tx/56edbbc493f52c3b2c6a9b566a84b3ef451ae4c791dd35d0e6f7e373f76d23fe