monero-site/resources/user-guides/prove-payment.md
2017-07-04 00:00:32 -06:00

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When you send money to a party who then disputes the payment was made, you need to be able to prove the payment was made.

With Bitcoin, this is typically done by looking up the transaction ID, where the origin and destination addresses are shown, along with the amount transacted.

Monero, however, is private: that information is not available publicly on the blockchain. The steps are therefore a bit more involved.

To prove to Charlie that she made a payment to Bob, Alice must supply Charlie three pieces of information:

  • the transaction ID, as is done in Bitcoin
  • Bob's address, as is done with Bitcoin
  • the transaction's key, which is new with Monero and other Cryptonote currencies

When Alice made the transaction, a one time key was automatically generated just for this transaction. Alice can query it thus in monero-wallet-cli (new name for the old simplewallet):

get_tx_key TXID

Alice would plug in her actual transaction ID instead of this TXID placeholder. All being well, the one time transaction key will be displayed.

Note that this will only work if monero-wallet-cli is set to save transaction keys. To double check:

set

If it's set to 0, set it to 1:

set store-tx-info 1

Alice can now send Charlie the transaction key along with transaction ID and Bob's address.

Note: if several transactions were made, this needs repeating for each such transaction.


Charlie now received those three pieces of information, and wants to check Alice is telling the truth: on an up to date blockchain, Charlie types in monero-wallet-cli:

check_tx_key TXID TXKEY ADDRESS

The information supplied by Alice plugs neatly instead of the placeholders. monero-wallet-cli will use the transaction key to decode the transaction, and display how much this particular transaction sent to this address. Obviously, Charlie will want to double check with Bob the address is really his - same as with Bitcoin.

Note: if several transactions were made, this needs repeating for each such transaction.