Security News
PyPI’s New Archival Feature Closes a Major Security Gap
PyPI now allows maintainers to archive projects, improving security and helping users make informed decisions about their dependencies.
Just getting started. ETA of first alpha: March/April 2016
This is a proof-of-concept version of a fully auditable decentralized government platform. It will allow elections, voting, banking, and other things. The goal is to explore the use of smart-contracts and blockchains in government. Hopefully it can later be coupled with off-chain services such as banking and E-citizenship systems.
The prototype will be restricted to the EU (i.e. be compliant with EU law).
This is a politically neutral project. The goal is to test this tech with government, much like it's being tested in finance, insurance, and many other fields. It's neither for nor against the EU - the testing ground just happens to be Europe.
The application is built on top of the DAO framework - a framework for modular systems of Ethereum contracts.
NOTE: Ethereum is still experimental, and so is this code. Using this on a chain where Ether has real value, or in any form of production environment is not recommended. Also, on-chain contracts are not legally binding.
Only tested on 64 bit Ubuntu 14.04+
Command-line Gulp is used for building and deploying.
You need solc (latest dev) and gpp
on your path to compile locally.
Building, testing and doc generation can be done for each module separately. Check the README in each folder for instructions. It can also be done for the entire framework at once using Gulp.
NOTE: This requires that the dependencies are in place.
NOTE: You need solc
on path.
Gulp: $ gulp build:contracts
Gulp: $ gulp test:contracts
This library is only officially supported on 64 bit Ubuntu 14.04+, although it should work on recent OSX versions. I will look into building on Windows when I have time.
I don't know what any of this is
I don't know how to read the contract code
http://solidity.readthedocs.org/en/latest/index.html
I can't build the contracts
This is normally because you don't have solc installed and on your path. solc
is a C++ library but they are thinking about building a command-line version in javascript, that extends the Emscripten compiled version, which will make it easier to install and use.
I can't test the contracts
This is normally because the contract build folders has been tampered with, or because sol-unit can't be installed.
I can't build html documentation
This could be because you don't have NaturalDocs on your path.
The entire framework is licensed under MIT.
FAQs
Decentralized government software
We found that spqe demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
PyPI now allows maintainers to archive projects, improving security and helping users make informed decisions about their dependencies.
Research
Security News
Malicious npm package postcss-optimizer delivers BeaverTail malware, targeting developer systems; similarities to past campaigns suggest a North Korean connection.
Security News
CISA's KEV data is now on GitHub, offering easier access, API integration, commit history tracking, and automated updates for security teams and researchers.