Ok boomer. 
Discussion
It would be great for this to be implemented. Just like how you can create a new Bitcoin address for every transfer, you could create a new key for every Nostr login, while keeping your actual nsec private and secure. As it works currently every login with your nsec is like typing in your 24 word backup into Internet connected software. There is a lot of trust involved there. If you could create keys with the possibility of invalidating them if a client app goes rogue it would get rid of that trust issue.
Bro. you move the new account, update the NIP-05, and post the nsec of the old account so everyone knows itās compromised.
Maybe Iām wrong, but I donāt get why heās FUDDING so hard
Be careful, nostr identity lies on the nsec/npub, NIP-05 is just an alias of it.
š«
Again, I could be wrong.
I logically assumed that if someoneās nip-05 doesnāt match the npub then you can verify the new one nip-05 and rotate to the new account with the correct nip-05
In #nostr you follow npubs, not NIP-05 aliases.
If a NIP-05 alias doesn't match the npub, the problem is on the alias, not on the npub.
š«
This will be a really extreme procedure (and we actually have some proposal to automate the process using WoT and auto-follow by compatible clients).
Actually it will be really hard to mess up your nsec when FROST bunkers will be fully supported by the ecosystem.
I would love to learn more about FROST bunkers
From the presentation of Nstart:
"This is really cool stuff made by fiatjaf, that uses FROST to split your nsec in 3 (or more) and distribute each shard to an independent trusted remote signer. This will give you a bunker code that you can use to log in to many web, mobile and desktop apps without exposing your nsec. If you ever lose your bunker code, if the signers vanish from Earth, and it stops working, or if it gets stolen by a malware virus, you can use your nsec to create a new one and invalidate the old one."
So cute!!
Parker complains about #nostr identities... while he thoughts he's owning his identity in close platforms?
No your keys, no your identity.
š«
Maybe we just donāt need people to have millions of followers as the reason they are important.
The good is the enemy is the perfect for Parker. In another age he would have been a BSVers