Reworks the "Pick your primary key" → Option B block in both tutorials
into a proper "Recovery phrases" mini-chapter:
• Table comparing 24-word (256 bits, bijection) vs 12-word (128 bits,
one-way SHA-256 derivation).
• Decision guide — why someone would actually pick 12 over 24 (and
vice versa). Explicitly: "save the phrase, not just the seed" for
the 12-word case.
• Wallet-incompatibility callout — KEZ phrases don't produce the
same key as the same phrase in Ledger / MetaMask / Bitcoin
wallets. Explains the two deliberate reasons (no BIP-39 PBKDF2,
no BIP-32 derivation tree), and the inverse — KEZ phrases can't be
used to extract funds from a hardware-wallet recovery so a
malicious importer can't phish that direction either.
• Concrete backup advice — pencil on paper, numbered words, fireproof
storage, don't photograph it, don't cloud-sync it, don't split it,
don't permute it. Calls out which password-manager patterns are
OK vs not.
• "Working with phrases later" — clean examples of `identity mnemonic`
(no key derived) and `identity from-mnemonic` (recover an existing
key), with the note that the recovered output is byte-for-byte
identical to what `identity new` originally printed.
Same content in both the Rust and Node tutorials, command examples
adapted to each CLI invocation style.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
24 KiB
Tutorial — your first KEZ identity, end to end (Node.js)
This is a hands-on walkthrough. By the end you'll have:
- ✅ A KEZ identity tied to a key you already trust (your existing nostr
nsec, or a brand-new Ed25519 key). - ✅ A signed proof that you control a GitHub account (or DNS domain, or nostr handle, etc.) — verifiable by anyone, no central server needed.
- ✅ A sigchain that ties multiple identities together, exported in a portable format, and published where strangers can find it.
- ✅ The ability to verify other people's identities the same way.
If you've used Keybase, the mental model is the same. The difference: KEZ has no required central authority. Your proofs live wherever you publish them; the verifier just walks the links.
This is the Node.js implementation. It is wire-compatible with the
Rust implementation — a claim signed by npm run cli
verifies in cargo run and vice versa.
For the full protocol spec, see ../SPEC.md. This document
is the friendly cousin.
Time budget: 10–15 minutes for the first claim. A bit more if you want to set up DNS or a sigchain publish.
0. Install
You'll need:
- Node.js 22+ — earlier versions don't have the global
WebSocketthe nostr channel relies on. Check withnode --version. - npm 9+ for workspaces.
Then:
git clone https://git.ptud.biz/DukeInc/Kez.git
cd Kez/nodejs
npm install
npm test # optional: run all vitest suites
Verify the CLI works:
npm run cli -- --help
You should see subcommands identity, claim, verify, and sigchain.
Note on
--. The bare--before the subcommand stops npm from swallowing flags. Every example below usesnpm run cli -- <stuff>.
Want a global
kezcommand instead? From insidenodejs/packages/kez-cli/runnpm linkonce. After that, plainkez claim create …works from anywhere — substitutekezfornpm run cli --in every example below.
Optional but recommended:
export GITHUB_TOKEN=ghp_...in your shell before verifying github claims. Anonymous GitHub limits you to 60 requests/hour; with a token it's 5000/hour. Any read-only token works; KEZ never sends it anywhere butapi.github.com.
1. Pick your primary key
Your primary key is the one private key the rest of your identity hangs off of. It signs every claim you make. Two choices:
Option A: use your existing nostr key (recommended if you have one)
If you already use nostr (Damus, Amethyst, primal, etc.), you already
have an nsec1... private key. Use it. KEZ understands nostr keys
natively as Schnorr/secp256k1.
Export the nsec from your nostr client (every client has a way —
usually Settings → Keys → Show / Export). Keep it secret; treat it the
same as a wallet seed.
Warning. Pasting your
nsecinto a CLI is fine on a machine you trust. Don't do it on a shared box, and consider whether you want shell history to remember it (unset HISTFILEfor the session, or prefix the command with a space ifHISTCONTROL=ignorespace).
You don't need any command to "register" an existing nsec — just pass
it with --nsec on the first claim you sign.
Option B: generate a fresh primary
A new nostr keypair:
npm run cli -- identity new
Or a new Ed25519 keypair, which comes with a BIP-39 phrase alongside the hex seed (both are equivalent backups):
npm run cli -- identity new --key-type ed25519 # 24-word
npm run cli -- identity new --key-type ed25519 --mnemonic-words 12 # 12-word
Output (24-word, the default):
Primary: ed25519:7a3b4c…
Public: 7a3b4c…
Secret: 9e3f51… (32-byte seed)
Mnemonic (24 words): "abandon ability able about above absent academy accident…"
Save the backup. Seed or phrase — at least one. Lose them both and the identity is gone. There's no recovery flow.
Recovery phrases — what's actually going on
A KEZ recovery phrase is a BIP-39 mnemonic — the same 2048-word English wordlist that Bitcoin, Ethereum, and most hardware wallets use. The words encode random bits:
| Phrase length | Random bits | Resulting Ed25519 seed |
|---|---|---|
| 24 words | 256 bits of entropy | The 32-byte seed is those 256 bits (1:1). Phrase ↔ seed round-trips. |
| 12 words | 128 bits of entropy | 16 bytes → 32-byte seed via SHA-256("kez-bip39-12-v1" || entropy). Phrase → seed only (one-way). |
Picking 12 vs 24
- Pick 24 words when you want full round-trip-ability — i.e. you'd like to be able to recover the phrase from the hex seed at any time in the future. Anyone's 32-byte Ed25519 secret can be re-encoded into the unique 24-word phrase that produced it. Bigger security margin (256 bits of entropy vs 128).
- Pick 12 words when you want a shorter thing to write down on paper or remember. 128 bits of entropy is still enormously beyond brute-forcing. The trade-off: the path is one-way only — you can always derive the seed from the phrase, but you cannot derive the phrase from the seed. So if you only ever have the seed, you'll never know what 12-word phrase produced it. Save the phrase itself, not just the resulting seed.
Either way the resulting Ed25519 identity is exactly the same shape; peers can't tell which word count you used. The choice is purely about your backup ergonomics.
⚠ Not compatible with hardware-wallet derivations
A KEZ 12-word phrase does not produce the same Bitcoin or Ethereum key as the same 12 words typed into a Ledger or MetaMask, and vice versa. The reasons are deliberate:
- Other wallets feed the phrase through BIP-39's PBKDF2 to get a 64-byte "seed", then run that through BIP-32 hierarchical derivation at a coin-specific path. KEZ doesn't — it takes the raw entropy and uses it directly (24-word case) or hashes it with a domain tag (12-word case).
- KEZ identities aren't part of a derivation tree. There's one identity per phrase; there's no path component.
That means: don't paste your existing hardware-wallet recovery phrase into KEZ expecting to get a key you've already seen. It'll produce a new KEZ identity uncorrelated with anything else.
Conversely: a KEZ phrase you saved is only useful for KEZ. A malicious wallet that says "import this phrase" can't extract your existing Bitcoin / Ethereum funds from a KEZ phrase, because the phrase wasn't derived through the same path.
Backing up — concrete advice
The phrase is the master key to your identity. Practical guidance:
- Write it on paper, with a pencil. Number each word (1–12 or 1–24) so you can later verify the order. A photograph or cloud document is one breach away from compromise.
- Store the paper somewhere fireproof. Safe-deposit boxes, lockable desk drawers, etched-stainless-steel cards if you're paranoid.
- Never type the phrase into a website, chat app, or password manager that auto-syncs. Local-only password managers (KeePassXC, 1Password locked vault) are OK; cloud-synced managers are a softer target.
- Don't split it across two locations "for safety". Half a BIP-39 phrase weakens the entropy more than it protects against loss. If you need redundancy, make two complete paper copies in different physical locations.
- Don't be cute. Don't permute the words "because they're easy to remember in this order." The wordlist position matters; reorder and you change the key (and the BIP-39 checksum will reject it on restore anyway).
Working with phrases later
You can generate a fresh phrase without producing a key, or recover the key from a phrase you wrote down earlier:
# Print a fresh 24-word phrase (or 12, with --words 12). No key derived.
npm run cli -- identity mnemonic
npm run cli -- identity mnemonic --words 12
# Recover the Ed25519 key from a phrase. Word count auto-detected.
npm run cli -- identity from-mnemonic "abandon ability able about above absent
academy accident account accuse achieve acid acoustic acquire across act
action actor actress actual adapt add addict address"
The recovered output is identical, byte-for-byte, to what was printed
when you first ran identity new — same Primary:, same Public:,
same Secret:.
Throughout the rest of this tutorial you can substitute
--mnemonic "your phrase here" anywhere --ed25519-seed <hex> appears.
Both are accepted on every command that takes a signing key.
For the rest of this tutorial we'll use a nostr key for examples and
write the secret as nsec1FAKE... — substitute your real one.
2. Sign your first claim
A claim is just a signed sentence: "the key I signed this with also
controls <subject>." The subject is a system:identifier string —
github:tudisco, dns:tud.ink, nostr:npub1…, etc.
Say you want to prove you control the GitHub username tudisco.
npm run cli -- claim create github:tudisco \
--nsec nsec1FAKE... \
--format markdown \
--out github-tudisco.kez.md
That writes a file like:
# KEZ Proof
This account publishes a signed KEZ identity claim.
- Primary: `nostr:npub1tkf…`
- Subject: `github:tudisco`
- Created: `2026-05-27T19:21:46Z`
```kez
{
"kez": "claim",
"payload": { ... },
"signature": {
"alg": "nostr-schnorr-bip340-jcs",
"key": "nostr:npub1tkf…",
"sig": "abc123…"
}
}
### Picking the right format
Same claim, three packagings — same signature inside:
| Format | When to use | Command |
|---|---|---|
| **markdown** | Anywhere you can paste rich text — gists, profile READMEs, social posts. Most human-readable. | `--format markdown` |
| **compact** | Tight places: DNS TXT records, QR codes, chat messages. One-liner that decompresses back to the full envelope. | `--format compact` |
| **json** | Self-hosted `.well-known/kez.json`, developer tooling, anything that wants the raw envelope. | (default — no flag needed) |
If you skip `--out`, the proof prints to stdout — handy for piping.
---
## 3. Publish the proof
This is where KEZ does its job: you put the signed claim in a place that
only *that specific account* could have put it. Anyone who can fetch
that place can then verify it themselves.
Pick the section that matches the subject system you claimed.
### GitHub
You signed `github:tudisco`. Publish the markdown block to either:
**A public gist named `kez.md`** — easiest.
1. Go to <https://gist.github.com/>.
2. New gist → filename `kez.md` → paste the contents of
`github-tudisco.kez.md`.
3. Click **Create public gist**.
**Or your profile README** — fancier but you only get one.
1. Make a repo named the same as your username (e.g.
`tudisco/tudisco`). GitHub treats it as your profile README.
2. Add the markdown block to `README.md`.
3. Push.
KEZ's GitHub verifier checks public gists first, then the profile
README.
### DNS — your own domain
You signed `dns:tud.ink`. The CLI generates a ready-to-paste zone-file
line for you:
```sh
npm run cli -- claim dns tud.ink --nsec nsec1FAKE...
Output (abbreviated):
_kez.tud.ink. 3600 IN TXT
"kez:z1:KLUv_WAsACUHAD…<chunk 1>…"
"<chunk 2>…"
Add that TXT record at _kez.<your-domain> in your DNS provider's
console (Cloudflare, Route 53, Gandi, Porkbun — wherever you registered
the domain). Most providers will accept the whole compact string in one
field and split it for you; the multi-chunk form above is the safe one
for providers that don't.
Wait a minute or two for propagation, then you can verify it.
Nostr — your own npub
You signed nostr:npub1.... Three places work (verifiers check all of
them):
- Profile
aboutfield (kind-0 event) — easiest, one-time. Edit your nostr profile and paste the markdown block into your bio. - A normal post (kind-1) containing the markdown block — quickest if you're already active.
- A NIP-78 kind-30078 event with
dtag =kez— cleanest for tooling, but most clients don't expose it.
Bluesky
Post the markdown block (or just the compact kez:z1:… string) as a
public post on the account you claimed. The verifier scans your recent
posts.
Mastodon / ActivityPub
You signed ap:@user@instance. Add the markdown block to your profile
metadata field (most instances expose 4 of them), or post it as a
pinned toot. The verifier resolves via WebFinger → actor JSON → checks
those fields.
Your own website
You signed web:https://example.com. Upload the JSON form to
https://example.com/.well-known/kez.json:
npm run cli -- claim create web:https://example.com --nsec nsec1FAKE... > kez.json
scp kez.json youruser@example.com:/var/www/.well-known/kez.json
Make sure it's publicly fetchable (no auth gate).
4. Verify it
This is the moment of truth. Pretend you're a stranger checking that the claim is real:
npm run cli -- verify id github:tudisco
Output:
Primary: nostr:npub1tkf...
Verified identities:
- github:tudisco
Status: valid
Confidence: strong
Same shape for any channel:
npm run cli -- verify id dns:tud.ink
npm run cli -- verify id nostr:npub1tkf...
npm run cli -- verify id bluesky:tudisco.bsky.social
npm run cli -- verify id ap:@tudisco@mastodon.social
npm run cli -- verify id web:https://tud.ink
The verifier:
- Figured out which channel from the prefix.
- Fetched the proof from where you published it (gist, TXT, etc.).
- Decoded the envelope.
- Verified the cryptographic signature against the key inside.
No KEZ server was involved. Each side of the conversation independently proves the claim — that's the whole point.
Cross-implementation verification
This is wire-compatible with the Rust CLI. You can sign in one and verify in the other:
# Sign in Node…
npm run cli -- claim create github:tudisco --nsec nsec1FAKE... --out p.kez.md
# …verify the same file in Rust
cd ../rust && cargo run -p kez-cli -- verify file ../nodejs/p.kez.md
Same bytes, same signature, both implementations agree.
If verification fails
A few common ones:
not_found— the proof isn't where the verifier looked. For GitHub, check the gist is public and the filename containskez. For DNS, the TXT record is at_kez.<domain>, not<domain>itself; give propagation a minute.subject_mismatch— you published a proof for one subject but asked the verifier to check a different one. The claim'ssubjectmust equal the identifier you're verifying.invalid_signature— the proof was tampered with, or you re-signed with a different key after publishing. Re-sign and re-publish.- GitHub
403 rate_limited— anonymous gets 60 req/hr; exportGITHUB_TOKEN. - Nostr "WebSocket is not defined" — your Node is older than 22. Upgrade.
5. Sigchain — link multiple identities together
A sigchain is an append-only log of "this key controls X" events, each signed by your primary. Once you have more than one claim, you want a sigchain so:
- Verifiers can discover your full identity graph from a single starting point.
- You can later revoke a claim (e.g., you lost access to that github account) without invalidating the others.
- Old events stay verifiable; the chain head is the current truth.
Chains live at ~/.kez/sigchains/<safe-primary>.jsonl. The CLI creates
the directory on first use; you don't manage it manually.
Add the github claim you already signed:
npm run cli -- sigchain add github:tudisco --nsec nsec1FAKE...
Add a DNS claim too:
npm run cli -- sigchain add dns:tud.ink --nsec nsec1FAKE...
You can optionally include a --proof-url pointing to where you
published this claim's proof (your gist URL, etc.). Verifiers can use
it to skip discovery.
Inspect what you've got:
npm run cli -- sigchain show --nsec nsec1FAKE...
Output:
Primary: nostr:npub1tkf...
Path: /home/you/.kez/sigchains/nostr_npub1tkf….jsonl
Length: 2 events
Head: sha256:9c3a…
Events:
1. add github:tudisco proof_url=https://gist.github.com/tudisco/abc
2. add dns:tud.ink
Read-only view of a published chain (no secret needed):
npm run cli -- sigchain show --primary nostr:npub1tkf...
This is what other people will do to inspect your identity graph.
Revoking
If you ever lose control of an account (your github gets hacked, you sell a domain), revoke that subject:
npm run cli -- sigchain revoke github:tudisco --nsec nsec1FAKE...
That appends a revoke event. Subsequent verifications treat that subject as "no longer claimed" by your primary, even if the old proof is still out there.
6. Publish your sigchain
Now make your chain discoverable so anyone with your primary can walk it. Options, in rough order of how much infra they need:
To a kez-sig-server (zero setup)
If you have access to a kez-sig-server (one
runs at https://sig.kez.lat):
npm run cli -- sigchain publish --nsec nsec1FAKE... \
--server https://sig.kez.lat
Each event is POSTed to the server, which exposes them at predictable URLs. Cheap, fast, but you're trusting that server to stay up. Mitigate by also publishing to one of the channels below.
To your own website (self-sovereign)
Export the chain bundle and host it yourself:
npm run cli -- sigchain publish --nsec nsec1FAKE... \
--web --out kez-sigchain.jsonl
Then upload kez-sigchain.jsonl to
https://<your-domain>/.well-known/kez-sigchain.jsonl. Verifiers
fetch it directly. Hardest to censor; you own it.
To DNS
npm run cli -- sigchain publish --nsec nsec1FAKE... --dns tud.ink
Prints a TXT record at _kez-chain.<domain> containing the
compressed chain. Add it to your zone. Works for short chains; for
long chains, prefer --web (TXT records are size-limited).
To nostr
npm run cli -- sigchain publish --nsec nsec1FAKE... \
--nostr wss://relay.damus.io
Publishes the compact bundle as a kind-30078 event on that relay. Any nostr client / verifier subscribed can find it.
Pick more than one
publish accepts any combination of these flags — you can mirror to
all four in one shot:
npm run cli -- sigchain publish --nsec nsec1FAKE... \
--server https://sig.kez.lat \
--web --out kez-sigchain.jsonl \
--dns tud.ink \
--nostr wss://relay.damus.io
Redundancy is good. If one channel goes down, the others still serve your identity graph.
Export-only (no publish)
If you want to see the bundle without publishing:
npm run cli -- sigchain export --nsec nsec1FAKE... --format compact > my-chain.txt
npm run cli -- sigchain export --nsec nsec1FAKE... --format jsonl > my-chain.jsonl
7. Verifying someone else
You've done the publishing side. Here's the receiving side — how to verify someone else's identity:
# Start from any identifier they've published a proof for.
npm run cli -- verify id github:linus
# Or walk their chain from any known endpoint:
npm run cli -- sigchain show --primary nostr:npub1abc...
If you have the chain bundle on disk:
npm run cli -- verify file ./their-chain.jsonl
verify id is the friendly day-to-day verb. sigchain show --primary <id> is what you'd reach for to see the whole graph at once.
8. Programmatic use — embedding KEZ in a Node app
You don't have to go through the CLI. The same logic is exported as a
library by the @kez/core and @kez/channels workspace packages.
import {
Identity,
NostrSecret,
newClaimPayload,
signClaim,
toMarkdown,
} from "@kez/core";
import { defaultRegistry } from "@kez/channels";
// Sign a claim
const secret = NostrSecret.fromNsec("nsec1FAKE...");
const subject = Identity.parse("github:tudisco");
const payload = newClaimPayload(subject, secret.identity(), new Date());
const claim = signClaim(payload, secret);
console.log(toMarkdown(claim));
// Verify a peer
const registry = await defaultRegistry();
const hit = await registry.verify(Identity.parse("dns:tud.ink"));
console.log(hit.status); // "valid"
For testing without hitting the live channels, every channel takes an
injectable fetcher (TxtResolver, NostrFetcher, etc.) — see the
package READMEs and __tests__/ folders for the exact shapes. The
implementations themselves are <300 lines each.
9. Quick reference card
# Generate a fresh primary
npm run cli -- identity new
npm run cli -- identity new --key-type ed25519
# Sign a claim
npm run cli -- claim create <subject> --nsec <nsec> # nostr key
npm run cli -- claim create <subject> --ed25519-seed <hex> # ed25519 key
npm run cli -- claim create <subject> --nsec <nsec> --format markdown --out file.md
npm run cli -- claim create <subject> --nsec <nsec> --format compact # one-liner
npm run cli -- claim dns <domain> --nsec <nsec> # zone-file output
# Verify
npm run cli -- verify id <subject> # live channel fetch
npm run cli -- verify file <path> # local file
# Sigchain
npm run cli -- sigchain add <subject> --nsec <nsec> [--proof-url <url>]
npm run cli -- sigchain revoke <subject> --nsec <nsec>
npm run cli -- sigchain show --nsec <nsec> # your own
npm run cli -- sigchain show --primary <id> # someone else's
npm run cli -- sigchain export --nsec <nsec> --format jsonl|compact [--out file]
npm run cli -- sigchain publish --nsec <nsec> \
[--server <url>] [--web --out <path>] [--dns <domain>] [--nostr <relay>]
10. Common confusions
"Do I need a sigchain to use KEZ?" No. A single signed claim, published, works on its own. The sigchain is for when you have several claims and want them discoverable together (and revocable).
"Why two key types — nostr and ed25519?" Different ecosystems use different curves. Nostr is secp256k1/Schnorr; the rest of the world mostly likes Ed25519. KEZ supports both natively so you can use the key you already have rather than spinning up a new one for KEZ specifically.
"Is my nsec sent to KEZ servers?" No, never. The CLI uses it
locally to sign things. Only the signed envelope (public key + claim
- signature) ever leaves your machine.
"What if I publish a proof and then someone else copies it and publishes it as theirs?" They can copy the bytes, but the signature inside is over your primary. Their primary won't match, so any verifier sees through it immediately.
"What if my key is compromised?" Append a sigchain revoke <subject> for the affected subjects, and ideally rotate to a new
primary by signing a final "this primary is succeeded by " event
(planned for the spec; not yet enforced by the CLI in v0.1).
"Is the Node version slower than Rust?" For everything but sigchain export of large chains, no — both use the same Noble curves underneath and the verifier is I/O-bound on the channel HTTP call. For batch sigchain work, the Rust binary will be a touch faster.
11. Where to go next
- The web client at https://kez.lat — same protocol, no CLI. Useful for showing non-technical friends.
../SPEC.md— the formal protocol, if you want to know exactly what every byte means.../rust/TUTORIAL.md— the same tutorial for the Rust implementation. Identical surface; faster binary.../rust-sig-server/— run your own sig-server, federate with others.- The channel plugin interface in
packages/kez-channels/src/index.ts— ~40 lines, add a new channel in an afternoon.
That's the whole tutorial. Welcome to KEZ.