web3/concepts/private-key.md

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Private Key

A cryptographic key, essentially a large number, that within a given cryptosystem gives whoever posses it access the ability to generate a public key and address which is associated with a numerical quantity on a blockchain known as a wallet and which imparts the capacity to transact in cryptoasset associated with the public key's address.

References

  1. Anderson, Patrick D. 2021. Privacy for the Weak, Transparency for the Powerful: The Cypherpunk Ethics of Julian Assange. Ethics and Information Technology 23 (3): 295308. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10676-020-09571-x.
  2. White, Molly. 2022. Anonymous Cryptocurrency Wallets Are Not So Simple. Molly White (blog). 12 February 2022. https://blog.mollywhite.net/anonymous-crypto-wallets/.
  3. Bailey, Andrew M., Bradley Rettler, and Craig Warmke. 2021. Philosophy, Politics, and Economics of Cryptocurrency II: The Moral Landscape of Monetary Design. Philosophy Compass 16 (11): 115. https://doi.org/10.1111/phc3.12784.
  4. Harvey, John, and Ines Branco-Illodo. 2020. Why Cryptocurrencies Want Privacy: A Review of Political Motivations and Branding Expressed in “Privacy Coin” Whitepapers. Journal of Political Marketing 19 (12): 10736. https://doi.org/10.1080/15377857.2019.1652223.
  5. Renwick, Robin, and Rob Gleasure. 2021. Those Who Control the Code Control the Rules: How Different Perspectives of Privacy Are Being Written into the Code of Blockchain Systems. Journal of Information Technology 36 (1): 1638. https://doi.org/10.1177/0268396220944406.
  6. West, Sarah Myers. 2018. Cryptographic Imaginaries and the Networked Public. Internet Policy Review 7 (2): 116. https://doi.org/10.14763/2018.2.792.