Yes, sounds good. Except PGP makes name a part of the key so we need to reinvent something from scratch.
PGP signature ->
"name" = public AES decryption key ->
website queries names network ->
browser makes AJAX request to get name from site
Lyberta {l Wrote}:Anyway, I found a solution with git:
- {l Code}: {l Select All Code}
git reset $(git commit-tree HEAD^{tree} -m "Commit message")
This will merge all previous commits into one. If you execute this after every commit only your current name will show up. There is no need to rewrite history when there is no history at all.
Lyberta {l Wrote}:Did you actually read the page you linked to?
Lyberta {l Wrote}:To change the name and/or email address recorded in existing commits, you must rewrite the entire history of your Git repository.
Warning: This action is destructive to your repository's history. If you're collaborating on a repository with others, it's considered bad practice to rewrite published history. You should only do this in an emergency.
It says it exactly. If you don't have full control of the repo - you're screwed. And if somebody cloned a repo - they're screwed.
Lyberta {l Wrote}:This will merge all previous commits into one. If you execute this after every commit only your current name will show up. There is no need to rewrite history when there is no history at all.
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