Replying to Avatar Leo Wandersleb

Nostr was designed primarily to be censorship resistant but that's a poor sales pitch apparently.

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Permissionlessness is the stronger concept. It isn't just a niche feature—it's the foundation of digital sovereignty that benefits everyone. Instead of leading with "censorship resistance," we should emphasize that Nostr gives you true ownership of your online presence.

Your keypair is your permanent identity that no one can take away. No more starting over when platforms change policies, no more losing your entire network when servers go down, no more invisible throttling of your content.

What we're building isn't just another social network—it's the first system where your connections and reputation truly belong to you, regardless of which relays you use. That's not a feature for the 1% of the 1%—it's the fundamental upgrade to social media that all users deserve, whether they realize it yet or not.

+ Interoperability. the reason i found nostr much more interesting over other systems like hypercore and web5 is that data generated by one app works with all the other apps as well (at least in an ideal scenario)

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