Hey @PABLOF7z
Is there any way to know what are the latest changes in NDK? It feels dangerous to update to use new versions of libraries whose source code has not been published...
btc_remnant
btc_remnant
npub1qw6s...4882
No one grants me freedom, for I am a free man. Intrinsic value doesn't exist. #Bitcoin Remnant
Remember that now in @WalletScrutiny you can Zap the verifiers of your favourite Bitcoin wallet.
For example, let's say you use @ZEUS wallet. So you see in X or Nostr that v0.11.4 has been released. You ideally do this:
1- Go to WalletScrutiny.com
2- Search for Zeus. Then choose Android (because you shouldn't be using iOS...)
3- You see that v0.11.4 has been verified to be reproducible from sources by @dannybuntu , so you click the verification for that version
4- You check if the verification has the quality you would expect
5- You Zap Danny some sats to thank him for the time spent verifying
6- Optionally you can follow his steps to reproduce the wallet yourself and create a new verification.
If you find that your preferred wallet doesn't have a verification yet, you can push the maintainers to do the verification, or do it yourself if you have the skills. Maybe you can earn some sats when other users Zap your verifications!
This week, nunchuk_io@nunchuk.io released Nunchuck v1.71.2. In just a few hours, the first reviewer tested that the build was reproducible from sources.
Before installing a new wallet or updating yours, don't forget to check @WalletScrutiny


WalletScrutiny
Nunchuk Bitcoin Wallet
Review of Nunchuk Bitcoin Wallet (verdict: sourceavailable)
This is a reminder to use @WalletScrutiny before downloading a wallet to your phone or desktop computer. You'll learn if it has any red flag, check if users have found the binaries to be reproducible, or if it's fully fake, like in the iOS Sparrow case from a few months ago.

