You Approve Everything
How Buho Jump earns your trust, one prompt at a time
Browser extensions are scary. They sit between you and the web, watching everything. Some read your passwords. Some inject ads. Some phone home with your browsing data.
When an extension handles your Bitcoin, the stakes are higher.
We built Buho Jump around one rule: nothing happens without your say.
First visit? You decide.
The first time a website asks for access, Buho Jump shows you exactly what it wants:
- See your public identity — read-only, can't post or spend
- Sign posts — can publish on your behalf
- Encrypt or read messages — access to your DMs
- Connect your wallet — can check balance and create invoices
You can approve everything at once, decide per request, or block the site entirely. Your call.
Payments always ask
Even if you've connected a site, payments get their own prompt every time. You see the amount, the site, and exactly what's leaving your wallet.
No silent charges. No surprises.
Spending budgets — for sites you trust
Some sites are different. You tip on Nostr clients. You pay for articles. You zap friends. Getting a prompt every single time is friction.
For those sites, you can set a spending budget. Buho Jump will auto-approve payments within your limit. When the budget runs out, it goes back to asking.
You can pause, adjust, or remove a budget anytime. A notification tells you every time something auto-approves, so you're never in the dark.
What you see in the extension
Every connected site shows up in your permission list with:
- Which permissions it has (and a button to revoke each one)
- Its spending budget with a progress bar
- Recent auto-approved payments
Sites with the most activity float to the top. You always know where your sats are going.
What we don't do
- We don't auto-approve payments without a budget you explicitly set
- We don't store permissions for a site you've blocked
- We don't send your private key to anyone — ever
- We don't phone home, track you, or run analytics
The boring truth
Good security is boring. It's a prompt that shows exactly what's happening. A toggle that does what it says. A progress bar that counts down. A notification that tells you what just happened.
No magic. No hidden behavior. Just a clear line between "you approved this" and "this didn't happen."
Buho Jump is open source. Audit the code yourself.