# user-invites when ssb was younger, we created the current invite system, henceforth in this document referred to as the "followbot" system. special peers called "pubs" can create tokens called "invite codes". The invite code allows a new person to connect to the pub, and request a follow. This generally worked fairly well, but had some problems: * not clear who invited who. * people were confused about what a "pub" was * sometimes pubs failed to follow back. * some pubs more inviting than others "too open" * hard to tell if growth was word of mouth or not ## solution: user-invites These are invites created directly by _users_ to directly invite _one_ new person. * host user creates invite, publishes stub, sends invite to guest * guest connects to pub, requests invite message, which contains host identity. * guest publishes accept message * guest passes accept message to pub directy * pub now replicates guest, considering them friend of host, and publishes a "confirm" containing the accept message. * other peers can strongly link invite with accept via confirm. ## example Alice wishes to invite Bob to her corner of the ssb network. But she is does not have a pub server. She creates a user invite, indicating that she is creating an invite. This is just a message on her feed. ``` js var seed = random(32) //32 bytes of randomness var invite_key = ssbKeys.generate(null, seed) var invite_cap = require('ssb-config').caps.invite alice_sbot.publish(ssbKeys.signObj({ type: 'invite', invite: invite_key.id, host: alice.id, //optional fields reveal: box(message_to_be_revealed, hash(hash(seed))), private: box(message_for_bob, hash(seed)) }, invite_cap, invite_key), function (err, invite_msg) { ... }) ``` `reveal` and `private` are optional, and will be discussed later. also note, the the invite is self-signed, to proove that alice created the invite code, and so that no one else can claim they invited alice's friend. The signature has an `invite_cap` so that it cannot be confused with another type of signature. *** TODO *** alice encodes the seed, the message id, and the addresses of some pubs that are likely to replicate bob. this is called the "invite code" she then gives the invite code to bob via a channel she already trusts, say, a 1:1 chat app. bob then connects to one of the pubs in the invite code, using the guest id derived from the seed (which the pub will recognise as alice's guest) bob then requests the invite message, and probably alice's feed. if the invite has reveal and public fields, bob decrypts them. if bob accepts the invite, bob then creates an "invite/accept" message, which is a proof that he has the seed, and knows who's invite he is accepting. ``` js var invite_key = ssbKeys.generate(null, seed) var invite_cap = require('ssb-config').caps.invite sbot_bob.publish(ssbKeys.signObj({ type: 'invite/accept', receipt: getId(invite_msg), //the id of the invite message id: bob.id, //the id we are accepting this invite as. //if the invite has a reveal, key must be included. key: hash(hash(seed)) }, invite_cap, invite_key), function (err, invite_accept_msg) { ... }) ``` This is then passed to the pub, who verifies it, and if is correct, posts a new message containing it. ``` js sbot_pub.publish({ type: 'invite/confirm', embed: invite_accept_msg //embed the whole message. }, function (err, invite_confirm_msg) { ... }) ``` the pub just reposts the whole invite_accept message that bob created. this makes the message available for other peers to validate, since they do not follow bob yet. the pub now knows that bob and alice are friends, and will start replicating bob. Other friends of alice who replicate the pub will also see this, and they will also start replicating bob. Thus alice's friends can welcome bob, knowing it's a friend of alice, even if alice is offline. ## reveal & private There are two optional encrypted fields on an invite. `reveal` and `private`. The private field contains a private message from the host that the guest reads when accepting the invite. The private field is intended to hold a private welcome message from the host. The reveal feed is more interesting. To accept the invite, the guest must provide the decryption key to the reveal field, otherwise their accept message is ignored. The reveal field is intended to hold a message from the host to their other peers, it's _about_ their guest, but it's _for_ their other friends. "hey everyone, this is bob, he's really awesome at growing mushrooms!" Most importantly, this message can be used to assign a name for bob. Also importantly, the reveal message is secret until bob accepts the invite. This avoids revealing anything about bob without his consent (he may choose not to accept the invite if he disagrees with what alice says about him) ## License MIT