<rss
      xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
      xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/"
      xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
      xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd"
      xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
      version="2.0"
    >
      <channel>
        <title><![CDATA[hodlbod]]></title>
        <description><![CDATA[Christian Bitcoiner and developer of the coracle.social nostr client.
Learn more at https://coracle.tools]]></description>
        <link>https://hodlbod.npub.pro/tag/mastodon/</link>
        <atom:link href="https://hodlbod.npub.pro/tag/mastodon/rss/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/>
        <itunes:new-feed-url>https://hodlbod.npub.pro/tag/mastodon/rss/</itunes:new-feed-url>
        <itunes:author><![CDATA[ hodlbod]]></itunes:author>
        <itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Christian Bitcoiner and developer of the coracle.social nostr client.
Learn more at https://coracle.tools]]></itunes:subtitle>
        <itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type>
        <itunes:owner>
          <itunes:name><![CDATA[ hodlbod]]></itunes:name>
          <itunes:email><![CDATA[ hodlbod]]></itunes:email>
        </itunes:owner>
            
      <pubDate>Fri, 14 Apr 2023 17:15:01 GMT</pubDate>
      <lastBuildDate>Fri, 14 Apr 2023 17:15:01 GMT</lastBuildDate>
      
      <itunes:image href="https://i.nostr.build/AZ0L.jpg" />
      <image>
        <title><![CDATA[hodlbod]]></title>
        <link>https://hodlbod.npub.pro/tag/mastodon/</link>
        <url>https://i.nostr.build/AZ0L.jpg</url>
      </image>
      <item>
      <title><![CDATA[How I learned to stop worrying and love the ostrich]]></title>
      <description><![CDATA[My Nostr story]]></description>
             <itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[My Nostr story]]></itunes:subtitle>
      <pubDate>Fri, 14 Apr 2023 17:15:01 GMT</pubDate>
      <link>https://hodlbod.npub.pro/post/1681485888115/</link>
      <comments>https://hodlbod.npub.pro/post/1681485888115/</comments>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">naddr1qqxnzd3cxy6rsdfc8qurzvf4qgsf03c2gsmx5ef4c9zmxvlew04gdh7u94afnknp33qvv3c94kvwxgsrqsqqqa28gzmvm8</guid>
      <category>nostr</category>
      
        <media:content url="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/juniperphoton-_lwLalY6Yzg-unsplash.jpeg" medium="image"/>
        <enclosure 
          url="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/juniperphoton-_lwLalY6Yzg-unsplash.jpeg" length="0" 
          type="image/jpeg" 
        />
      <noteId>naddr1qqxnzd3cxy6rsdfc8qurzvf4qgsf03c2gsmx5ef4c9zmxvlew04gdh7u94afnknp33qvv3c94kvwxgsrqsqqqa28gzmvm8</noteId>
      <npub>npub1jlrs53pkdfjnts29kveljul2sm0actt6n8dxrrzqcersttvcuv3qdjynqn</npub>
      <dc:creator><![CDATA[ hodlbod]]></dc:creator>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The year was 2020 — the distant past. I had just had my classically liberal political philosophy beaten out of me with a stick. Joe Biden, the man who ran his campaign from his basement using the tagline <a href="https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2019/12/3/20991841/joe-biden-no-malarkey">"No Malarkey"</a> was challenging the Drumpf for the highest office in the land. I had left the surveillance hellscape that is Facebook behind 4 years prior, but Twitter, I never expected it of you.</p>
<p><img src="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/blog/2304/twitter3.png" alt="Healthy"></p>
<p>Long story short: you know what happened. Did Biden steal the election? Would Trump have won if the NY Post article hadn't been suppressed? These are questions that history is not likely to answer. But was social media acting as a propaganda arm of the state? Yeah.</p>
<h1>Follow the White Rabbit</h1>
<p>So in November 2020, I tried to answer for myself the question: "What alternatives to Twitter are there"?</p>
<p>See, I won't name names here, but my local church community had gotten some press from a handful of large mainstream media outlets in the months leading up to the election, mostly related to our protestation of Covid tyranny and the hysteria that fueled it. These protests culminated in a couple of arrests, all of which were (years) later thrown out by a federal judge as being clearly in violation of our first amendment rights.</p>
<p>So you might see how I would be concerned about what we Christians would refer to as "persecution" coming down the pike, beginning with our freedom of speech. Luckily, the rot has advanced more slowly than I originally feared, and we are not all residents of the gulag as yet. I know some people would laugh at this, saying that Christians are privileged and dominant in our western world. To them, I would say: "fasten your seat belt Dorothy, 'cause <a href="https://aaronrenn.substack.com/i/45894601/the-three-worlds">Kansas is going bye-bye</a>."</p>
<p>My survey of Twitter alternatives wasn't encouraging. While I didn't go as deep as <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6YQQC5Q_5g&amp;t=10143s">Rabble</a>, I think I hit most of the high points, the highest of which was <a href="https://www.scuttlebutt.nz/">Scuttlebutt</a>, which has some hard limits to scaling. So I shrugged my shoulders and said, "hopefully somebody comes up with a solution".</p>
<h1>I guess I'll do it</h1>
<p>A year later, I did another survey of the decentralized social media space, and it looked exactly the same. At that point I realized "hey, I'm somebody", and in January 2022 I wrote the <a href="https://github.com/blazepoint/docs/blob/master/whitepaper.pdf">Blazepoint white paper</a>. In it, I outlined the problems with current social media alternatives, and an innovative way to solve them using a novel multi-master architecture! I knew this was a huge project with an approximately 0% chance of success, so I committed to working on it for the next ten years.</p>
<p>Of course, unknown to me our good friend fiatjaf was already laboring away on a very similar protocol named after an ostrich or something. Two weeks or so after I wrote my white paper I came across Nostr, which had a very similar design. After unsuccessfully attempting to convince fiatjaf (via an extremely buggy DM implementation on <a href="https://github.com/fiatjaf/branle">branle</a>) that my protocol was better, I went back to refining my protocol on my free nights and weekends.</p>
<p>If you look at the Blazepoint repository, you can see that the last commit was on May 23rd, 2022. Life had gotten busy, and while I still fully intended to keep my commitment to myself, as it turns out building a protocol by yourself is not easy. So in November of 2022 I threw in the towel, and dove headfirst into Urbit!</p>
<h1>No, Just Kidding</h1>
<p>I lasted about four hours with Urbit before thinking "ain't nobody got time for this". My resistance to the allures of Nostr folded, and over Thanksgiving break while my kids hung out with my wife and her family, I sat in a freezing RV feverishly coding the first version of Coracle. If you want to play around with it, you can still access it at <a href="https://v1-coracle-social.onrender.com">here</a>. I also have a screencast uploaded <a href="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/blog/2304/coracle-2211">here</a>. It basically works!</p>
<p>Late in the week, I pushed my work in progress to Github, and immediately got a message from fiatjaf about it. He wanted to see my work! It wasn't at all ready, but I deployed it and showed it off.</p>
<p><img src="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/blog/2304/its-a-wip.png" alt="It's a WIP"></p>
<p>Everyone was very complimentary, which made me even more motivated to work on it. That kicked off 5 months (and counting) of waking up at 4 AM multiple times a week so I could put in more time.</p>
<p><img src="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/blog/2304/super-good.png" alt="Super good"></p>
<p>The rest, as they say, is history. Jack followed me on Twitter, and tweeted about Coracle. He later told me that being able to switch easily between Damus and Coracle is what originally hooked him! Interoperability FTW.</p>
<p><img src="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/blog/2304/jack-tweet.png" alt="Jack's tweet"><br><img src="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/blog/2304/jack-nost.png" alt="Jack's post"></p>
<h1>What's Next</h1>
<p>It's now mid-April, 2023 and I'm finishing up a fellowship at <a href="https://futo.org/">FUTO</a> — they gave me a generous grant of $20k to spend three months working on Coracle full time, and I've tried not to disappoint. But my time is drawing to an end, and I'm wondering what to do next — find funding and start my own company? Go back to my old job? Something in between? I've got a few irons in the fire, so we'll see which one hatches first.</p>
<p>Finally, I would be remiss if I didn't give God the glory for this journey. All along the way I have been pushed out of my comfort zone, and over and over God has "worked all things out for good to those who... are called according to his purpose" just in time, and in unexpected ways. Coracle is God's project, and I pray every day that he would "establish the work of our hands for us, yes, establish the work of our hands."</p>
<p>So here's to the next 10 years of Nostr (that's 6 months in real-world years)! 🥂</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <itunes:author><![CDATA[ hodlbod]]></itunes:author>
      <itunes:summary><![CDATA[<p>The year was 2020 — the distant past. I had just had my classically liberal political philosophy beaten out of me with a stick. Joe Biden, the man who ran his campaign from his basement using the tagline <a href="https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2019/12/3/20991841/joe-biden-no-malarkey">"No Malarkey"</a> was challenging the Drumpf for the highest office in the land. I had left the surveillance hellscape that is Facebook behind 4 years prior, but Twitter, I never expected it of you.</p>
<p><img src="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/blog/2304/twitter3.png" alt="Healthy"></p>
<p>Long story short: you know what happened. Did Biden steal the election? Would Trump have won if the NY Post article hadn't been suppressed? These are questions that history is not likely to answer. But was social media acting as a propaganda arm of the state? Yeah.</p>
<h1>Follow the White Rabbit</h1>
<p>So in November 2020, I tried to answer for myself the question: "What alternatives to Twitter are there"?</p>
<p>See, I won't name names here, but my local church community had gotten some press from a handful of large mainstream media outlets in the months leading up to the election, mostly related to our protestation of Covid tyranny and the hysteria that fueled it. These protests culminated in a couple of arrests, all of which were (years) later thrown out by a federal judge as being clearly in violation of our first amendment rights.</p>
<p>So you might see how I would be concerned about what we Christians would refer to as "persecution" coming down the pike, beginning with our freedom of speech. Luckily, the rot has advanced more slowly than I originally feared, and we are not all residents of the gulag as yet. I know some people would laugh at this, saying that Christians are privileged and dominant in our western world. To them, I would say: "fasten your seat belt Dorothy, 'cause <a href="https://aaronrenn.substack.com/i/45894601/the-three-worlds">Kansas is going bye-bye</a>."</p>
<p>My survey of Twitter alternatives wasn't encouraging. While I didn't go as deep as <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6YQQC5Q_5g&amp;t=10143s">Rabble</a>, I think I hit most of the high points, the highest of which was <a href="https://www.scuttlebutt.nz/">Scuttlebutt</a>, which has some hard limits to scaling. So I shrugged my shoulders and said, "hopefully somebody comes up with a solution".</p>
<h1>I guess I'll do it</h1>
<p>A year later, I did another survey of the decentralized social media space, and it looked exactly the same. At that point I realized "hey, I'm somebody", and in January 2022 I wrote the <a href="https://github.com/blazepoint/docs/blob/master/whitepaper.pdf">Blazepoint white paper</a>. In it, I outlined the problems with current social media alternatives, and an innovative way to solve them using a novel multi-master architecture! I knew this was a huge project with an approximately 0% chance of success, so I committed to working on it for the next ten years.</p>
<p>Of course, unknown to me our good friend fiatjaf was already laboring away on a very similar protocol named after an ostrich or something. Two weeks or so after I wrote my white paper I came across Nostr, which had a very similar design. After unsuccessfully attempting to convince fiatjaf (via an extremely buggy DM implementation on <a href="https://github.com/fiatjaf/branle">branle</a>) that my protocol was better, I went back to refining my protocol on my free nights and weekends.</p>
<p>If you look at the Blazepoint repository, you can see that the last commit was on May 23rd, 2022. Life had gotten busy, and while I still fully intended to keep my commitment to myself, as it turns out building a protocol by yourself is not easy. So in November of 2022 I threw in the towel, and dove headfirst into Urbit!</p>
<h1>No, Just Kidding</h1>
<p>I lasted about four hours with Urbit before thinking "ain't nobody got time for this". My resistance to the allures of Nostr folded, and over Thanksgiving break while my kids hung out with my wife and her family, I sat in a freezing RV feverishly coding the first version of Coracle. If you want to play around with it, you can still access it at <a href="https://v1-coracle-social.onrender.com">here</a>. I also have a screencast uploaded <a href="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/blog/2304/coracle-2211">here</a>. It basically works!</p>
<p>Late in the week, I pushed my work in progress to Github, and immediately got a message from fiatjaf about it. He wanted to see my work! It wasn't at all ready, but I deployed it and showed it off.</p>
<p><img src="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/blog/2304/its-a-wip.png" alt="It's a WIP"></p>
<p>Everyone was very complimentary, which made me even more motivated to work on it. That kicked off 5 months (and counting) of waking up at 4 AM multiple times a week so I could put in more time.</p>
<p><img src="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/blog/2304/super-good.png" alt="Super good"></p>
<p>The rest, as they say, is history. Jack followed me on Twitter, and tweeted about Coracle. He later told me that being able to switch easily between Damus and Coracle is what originally hooked him! Interoperability FTW.</p>
<p><img src="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/blog/2304/jack-tweet.png" alt="Jack's tweet"><br><img src="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/blog/2304/jack-nost.png" alt="Jack's post"></p>
<h1>What's Next</h1>
<p>It's now mid-April, 2023 and I'm finishing up a fellowship at <a href="https://futo.org/">FUTO</a> — they gave me a generous grant of $20k to spend three months working on Coracle full time, and I've tried not to disappoint. But my time is drawing to an end, and I'm wondering what to do next — find funding and start my own company? Go back to my old job? Something in between? I've got a few irons in the fire, so we'll see which one hatches first.</p>
<p>Finally, I would be remiss if I didn't give God the glory for this journey. All along the way I have been pushed out of my comfort zone, and over and over God has "worked all things out for good to those who... are called according to his purpose" just in time, and in unexpected ways. Coracle is God's project, and I pray every day that he would "establish the work of our hands for us, yes, establish the work of our hands."</p>
<p>So here's to the next 10 years of Nostr (that's 6 months in real-world years)! 🥂</p>
]]></itunes:summary>
      <itunes:image href="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/juniperphoton-_lwLalY6Yzg-unsplash.jpeg"/>
      </item>
      
      <item>
      <title><![CDATA[A Vision for Nostr]]></title>
      <description><![CDATA[What Mastodon got wrong, and what I hope Nostr gets right]]></description>
             <itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[What Mastodon got wrong, and what I hope Nostr gets right]]></itunes:subtitle>
      <pubDate>Wed, 29 Mar 2023 19:55:14 GMT</pubDate>
      <link>https://hodlbod.npub.pro/post/a-vision-for-nostr/</link>
      <comments>https://hodlbod.npub.pro/post/a-vision-for-nostr/</comments>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">naddr1qqfxzttkd9ekjmmw94nx7u3ddehhxarjqgsf03c2gsmx5ef4c9zmxvlew04gdh7u94afnknp33qvv3c94kvwxgsrqsqqqa2807nk73</guid>
      <category>nostr</category>
      
        <media:content url="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/juniperphoton-_lwLalY6Yzg-unsplash.jpeg" medium="image"/>
        <enclosure 
          url="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/juniperphoton-_lwLalY6Yzg-unsplash.jpeg" length="0" 
          type="image/jpeg" 
        />
      <noteId>naddr1qqfxzttkd9ekjmmw94nx7u3ddehhxarjqgsf03c2gsmx5ef4c9zmxvlew04gdh7u94afnknp33qvv3c94kvwxgsrqsqqqa2807nk73</noteId>
      <npub>npub1jlrs53pkdfjnts29kveljul2sm0actt6n8dxrrzqcersttvcuv3qdjynqn</npub>
      <dc:creator><![CDATA[ hodlbod]]></dc:creator>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>"What is Nostr?" is a hard question to answer. But an even more difficult one is "what should Nostr be?" Set aside the fact that "other stuff" is making up an ever-growing share of Nostr applications, even the social media use case on its own is a fractal of a problem.</p>
<p>What's encouraging though, is that despite the complexity of "social media", there is a surprising level of consensus on what needs to be done - within the Nostr developer community, differences are characterized more by emphasis than by direction.</p>
<h1>Staying on mission</h1>
<p>Instead of focusing on "problems to be solved" within the current system (e.g. content monetization or data harvesting), people who "get" nostr have made its core principles their own. Because these principles radically differ from the way things are done in centralized systems, they spawn a complex system of new affordances and limitations.</p>
<p>If I had to sum up what the core principle of Nostr is, I would say "individual sovereignty". Nostr is a social experiment that asks people to take responsibility for what they say (and sell, host, publish, promote). This topic has been explored ad nauseum by <a href="https://dergigi.com/2019/08/22/the-rise-of-the-sovereign-individual/">better writers than I</a> using Bitcoin as a vehicle, so I'll avoid re-treading the same ground if I can, except to point out that the two key design decisions of the Nostr protocol, self-custody of keys and hosting spread across multiple relays, simultaneously entrust control to users and revoke certain entitlements users are accustomed to.</p>
<p>It's well- (maybe even over-) understood what the risks and benefits are of holding your own keys. And being able to either select or host your own relays, each with different purposes and characteristics, gives individuals a level of control over his own publishing platform precedented only by the World Wide Web itself.</p>
<h1>Lies they tell</h1>
<p>But there are a lot of things users lose when moving away from a centralized platform. The ability to edit, delete, block, and promote content are not what I'm talking about - the guarantees for being able to do these things on Nostr are weaker, but as long as someone can take a screenshot of your Tweet, or block Google's ads, or log in with a different account, the affordances provided by centralized platforms are conveniences at best, and illusory at worst - that is, unless we go full digital panopticon, with universal biometric authentication and DRM for our brains.</p>
<p>What is more interesting to me is how centralized social media platforms lie about what they essentially are. Twitter's motto is "what’s happening", and their <a href="https://about.twitter.com/en">about page</a> features a tweet encouraging others to "Speak the truth, even if your voice shakes." And yet over the last several years they have censored real news, promoted propaganda, and shadow banned those whose "voice shakes". Musk's desperate claims that "we'll stop, I promise" don't negate the fact that Twitter retains control over users' speech in a way that is inherently in conflict with their stated mission.</p>
<p>This is true even of non-political speech, because it is in Twitter's interest to promote content that drives engagement, because engagement is what in turn drives advertising profits. This undermines their claim of user enfranchisement - they exercise partiality in choosing whose voice gets a megaphone.</p>
<p>Users of Nostr know the feeling of this weight being lifted. Nostr is anything but polished, but that's part of the charm - you know there is no one scanning your content, deciding who sees what and with what "added context". Many users including myself have experienced a 10x or more increase in engagement, despite a much smaller number of people on the platform. This is of course likely due not only to the lack of an algorithm, but also to the lack of celebrities, which tend to absorb attention, leaving little for the rest of us. But for now, Nostr is for the plebs.</p>
<h1>Cutting the Gordian Knot</h1>
<p>And I hope, and have reason, that it will continue to be so. When I spoke to my pastor prior to moving to Austin to work on Coracle full-time, I asked him what problems related to social media he would like to see solved. He said that he would like to see a solution that puts users in control of their algorithm, and allows individuals to broadcast their content to as wide an audience as possible.</p>
<p>There is a contradiction here, and the claim that it can be solved is one of the main lies that centralized platforms like to tell. You are free to broadcast your data as widely as you want, but no one is obligated to read it. Twitter tries to square the circle by artificially reversing this trade-off, resulting in a system where "you can't broadcast your data unless we want to force people to read it." But even they can't give their users control while simultaneously taking it away.</p>
<p>There is a path forward though, and now we finally get to the point of this post. Nostr is so revolutionary because it puts "digital localism" within reach. I had better define my terms here, since "digital localism" is used to describe a lot of dystopian ideas I'm not very excited about. What I mean by the term is something like "social relevance". Contra the egalitarians, there are real differences that exist to set groups of people apart. Things like topical interest, physical geography, professional network, religious belief, and yes, ethnicity and sex.</p>
<h1>What is a community anyway</h1>
<p>The fact that digital "communties" exist is something that to their credit Mastodon recognized, and sought to accommodate. But they missed the fact that humanity is partitioned into a nearly infinite number of overlapping sub-groups based on a nearly infinite number of dimensions. Yes, maybe I should be friends with you because you also like cats, but let's refine this further, do you think cilantro tastes like soap, are you a member of the Church of Satan, are you Italian, have you been reading Hayak lately, do you like watching Hallmark movies, English, do you speak it? Partitioning people into groups based on a single dimension is an exercise in futility, and is the reason Mastodon instances are either ghost towns or home to millions of users.</p>
<p>By allowing users to download/host their own data and join as many and whichever relays they choose based on arbitrary criteria, people are now able to co-locate in digital space, and interact with each instance in a different way. This is why I'm not excited about tools that spray your data to as many relays as possible. This only serves to maintain the illusion that replicating all content across every instance can scale, and it can't.</p>
<p>Instead, relays should differentiate, both in terms of function and membership. In the future (and even now) there will be closed archival relays that scrape the network and provide a backup of user data for a fee; public-read, private-write relays that allow members to participate in an exclusive group with greater reach; private-read, private-write closed community relays; public "town square" relays, paid relays that provide indexes, full-text search, or content recommendations for the wider network (or a relevant subset of it); and relays that provide oracles for data external to nostr. The ability of users to pick and choose which relays to connect to (and to multiplex those connections through yet another proxy/aggregator relay) allows them to define their own low-granularity social graph, refining it further with follows, mutes, and other "algorithmic" tools.</p>
<p>The same is true of client implementations. Many people building social media platforms want to "fix Twitter". But that vision of digital society is amazingly narrow (luckily, Nostr developers don't seem to suffer from the same kind of myopia). <em>Most</em> people I know don't have Twitter accounts, or use them. For them, Twitter is about as relevant to their lives as CNN. Instead, they use private Facebook groups to arrange babysitters for their kids, or Cragislist to buy and sell local goods. They use Google maps to find reviews for nearby businesses, and the church email list to keep up with prayer requests. They subscribe to newsletters their friends publish, and spend their days at work sending memes over Slack. The common theme here is that all these platforms connect "us" with "mine", not with "them". And yes, journalism and topical interest ala Reddit is a part of this, but for normal people, a vanishingly small part. But let's stop squawking about "echo chambers".</p>
<p>And Nostr, <a href="https://blog.coracle.social/what-nostr-is-bad-at.html">despite its limitations</a>, can be applied to every use case enumerated above. In so doing, it will free regular people from the constraining force of opinionated, artificial, centralized communication platforms, and allow them to build a digital social network that complements real life.</p>
<h1>Conclusion</h1>
<p>The driving force, for me, is not to erase our differences and create an egalitarian utopia, or stick it to big tech, or to make money, but to see the people I love, who belong to me, and to whom I belong, flourish by being connected with the people who belong to them, and to whom they belong. The resulting network will be characterized by high trust and high cohesion, laying a solid foundation for content and ideas to efficiently propagate across the distributed social graph, similar to how the lightning network routes transactions. But the key to making this work is to rise to the occasion, and take back our digital sovereignty by making it as easy for the average person to navigate the digital social landscape as they do in real life.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <itunes:author><![CDATA[ hodlbod]]></itunes:author>
      <itunes:summary><![CDATA[<p>"What is Nostr?" is a hard question to answer. But an even more difficult one is "what should Nostr be?" Set aside the fact that "other stuff" is making up an ever-growing share of Nostr applications, even the social media use case on its own is a fractal of a problem.</p>
<p>What's encouraging though, is that despite the complexity of "social media", there is a surprising level of consensus on what needs to be done - within the Nostr developer community, differences are characterized more by emphasis than by direction.</p>
<h1>Staying on mission</h1>
<p>Instead of focusing on "problems to be solved" within the current system (e.g. content monetization or data harvesting), people who "get" nostr have made its core principles their own. Because these principles radically differ from the way things are done in centralized systems, they spawn a complex system of new affordances and limitations.</p>
<p>If I had to sum up what the core principle of Nostr is, I would say "individual sovereignty". Nostr is a social experiment that asks people to take responsibility for what they say (and sell, host, publish, promote). This topic has been explored ad nauseum by <a href="https://dergigi.com/2019/08/22/the-rise-of-the-sovereign-individual/">better writers than I</a> using Bitcoin as a vehicle, so I'll avoid re-treading the same ground if I can, except to point out that the two key design decisions of the Nostr protocol, self-custody of keys and hosting spread across multiple relays, simultaneously entrust control to users and revoke certain entitlements users are accustomed to.</p>
<p>It's well- (maybe even over-) understood what the risks and benefits are of holding your own keys. And being able to either select or host your own relays, each with different purposes and characteristics, gives individuals a level of control over his own publishing platform precedented only by the World Wide Web itself.</p>
<h1>Lies they tell</h1>
<p>But there are a lot of things users lose when moving away from a centralized platform. The ability to edit, delete, block, and promote content are not what I'm talking about - the guarantees for being able to do these things on Nostr are weaker, but as long as someone can take a screenshot of your Tweet, or block Google's ads, or log in with a different account, the affordances provided by centralized platforms are conveniences at best, and illusory at worst - that is, unless we go full digital panopticon, with universal biometric authentication and DRM for our brains.</p>
<p>What is more interesting to me is how centralized social media platforms lie about what they essentially are. Twitter's motto is "what’s happening", and their <a href="https://about.twitter.com/en">about page</a> features a tweet encouraging others to "Speak the truth, even if your voice shakes." And yet over the last several years they have censored real news, promoted propaganda, and shadow banned those whose "voice shakes". Musk's desperate claims that "we'll stop, I promise" don't negate the fact that Twitter retains control over users' speech in a way that is inherently in conflict with their stated mission.</p>
<p>This is true even of non-political speech, because it is in Twitter's interest to promote content that drives engagement, because engagement is what in turn drives advertising profits. This undermines their claim of user enfranchisement - they exercise partiality in choosing whose voice gets a megaphone.</p>
<p>Users of Nostr know the feeling of this weight being lifted. Nostr is anything but polished, but that's part of the charm - you know there is no one scanning your content, deciding who sees what and with what "added context". Many users including myself have experienced a 10x or more increase in engagement, despite a much smaller number of people on the platform. This is of course likely due not only to the lack of an algorithm, but also to the lack of celebrities, which tend to absorb attention, leaving little for the rest of us. But for now, Nostr is for the plebs.</p>
<h1>Cutting the Gordian Knot</h1>
<p>And I hope, and have reason, that it will continue to be so. When I spoke to my pastor prior to moving to Austin to work on Coracle full-time, I asked him what problems related to social media he would like to see solved. He said that he would like to see a solution that puts users in control of their algorithm, and allows individuals to broadcast their content to as wide an audience as possible.</p>
<p>There is a contradiction here, and the claim that it can be solved is one of the main lies that centralized platforms like to tell. You are free to broadcast your data as widely as you want, but no one is obligated to read it. Twitter tries to square the circle by artificially reversing this trade-off, resulting in a system where "you can't broadcast your data unless we want to force people to read it." But even they can't give their users control while simultaneously taking it away.</p>
<p>There is a path forward though, and now we finally get to the point of this post. Nostr is so revolutionary because it puts "digital localism" within reach. I had better define my terms here, since "digital localism" is used to describe a lot of dystopian ideas I'm not very excited about. What I mean by the term is something like "social relevance". Contra the egalitarians, there are real differences that exist to set groups of people apart. Things like topical interest, physical geography, professional network, religious belief, and yes, ethnicity and sex.</p>
<h1>What is a community anyway</h1>
<p>The fact that digital "communties" exist is something that to their credit Mastodon recognized, and sought to accommodate. But they missed the fact that humanity is partitioned into a nearly infinite number of overlapping sub-groups based on a nearly infinite number of dimensions. Yes, maybe I should be friends with you because you also like cats, but let's refine this further, do you think cilantro tastes like soap, are you a member of the Church of Satan, are you Italian, have you been reading Hayak lately, do you like watching Hallmark movies, English, do you speak it? Partitioning people into groups based on a single dimension is an exercise in futility, and is the reason Mastodon instances are either ghost towns or home to millions of users.</p>
<p>By allowing users to download/host their own data and join as many and whichever relays they choose based on arbitrary criteria, people are now able to co-locate in digital space, and interact with each instance in a different way. This is why I'm not excited about tools that spray your data to as many relays as possible. This only serves to maintain the illusion that replicating all content across every instance can scale, and it can't.</p>
<p>Instead, relays should differentiate, both in terms of function and membership. In the future (and even now) there will be closed archival relays that scrape the network and provide a backup of user data for a fee; public-read, private-write relays that allow members to participate in an exclusive group with greater reach; private-read, private-write closed community relays; public "town square" relays, paid relays that provide indexes, full-text search, or content recommendations for the wider network (or a relevant subset of it); and relays that provide oracles for data external to nostr. The ability of users to pick and choose which relays to connect to (and to multiplex those connections through yet another proxy/aggregator relay) allows them to define their own low-granularity social graph, refining it further with follows, mutes, and other "algorithmic" tools.</p>
<p>The same is true of client implementations. Many people building social media platforms want to "fix Twitter". But that vision of digital society is amazingly narrow (luckily, Nostr developers don't seem to suffer from the same kind of myopia). <em>Most</em> people I know don't have Twitter accounts, or use them. For them, Twitter is about as relevant to their lives as CNN. Instead, they use private Facebook groups to arrange babysitters for their kids, or Cragislist to buy and sell local goods. They use Google maps to find reviews for nearby businesses, and the church email list to keep up with prayer requests. They subscribe to newsletters their friends publish, and spend their days at work sending memes over Slack. The common theme here is that all these platforms connect "us" with "mine", not with "them". And yes, journalism and topical interest ala Reddit is a part of this, but for normal people, a vanishingly small part. But let's stop squawking about "echo chambers".</p>
<p>And Nostr, <a href="https://blog.coracle.social/what-nostr-is-bad-at.html">despite its limitations</a>, can be applied to every use case enumerated above. In so doing, it will free regular people from the constraining force of opinionated, artificial, centralized communication platforms, and allow them to build a digital social network that complements real life.</p>
<h1>Conclusion</h1>
<p>The driving force, for me, is not to erase our differences and create an egalitarian utopia, or stick it to big tech, or to make money, but to see the people I love, who belong to me, and to whom I belong, flourish by being connected with the people who belong to them, and to whom they belong. The resulting network will be characterized by high trust and high cohesion, laying a solid foundation for content and ideas to efficiently propagate across the distributed social graph, similar to how the lightning network routes transactions. But the key to making this work is to rise to the occasion, and take back our digital sovereignty by making it as easy for the average person to navigate the digital social landscape as they do in real life.</p>
]]></itunes:summary>
      <itunes:image href="https://coracle.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/juniperphoton-_lwLalY6Yzg-unsplash.jpeg"/>
      </item>
      
      </channel>
      </rss>
    