Outside of large corporations, the internet is and has always been free as in freedom. If you grew up in the pre-Facebook era you know it was a different place back then.

Part of why I love Nostr so much is that it feels like a return to the internet I grew up with. No corporate overlords, no central control, just communities of people keeping their community alive as long as enough people pay the hosting bill.

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I concur. hey i don't want any jordan peterson candy or anything but how might a person connect one of these nostr wallets to ledger live?

I love your sentiment and I agree with pre-facebook era vibe - the computer was there to do wild shit and burn CDs...similar to reality TV screwing up MTV, socials and porn have cheapened the average potential. However, you're forgetting about Uncle Sammy...Snowden was over a decade ago...that work has been kept up, expanded, and supercharged. They know when you take a shit, and they have everyone fooled into thinking, "Well as long as I don't commit a crime..." I'm sure the 19th century slaves thought the same just before they got lynched without provocation.

Sure but back in the Usenet days everything was sent in the clear anyway, there was no encryption, so the government didn't need special spying programmes to watch you. They just asked your phone company.

Today, especially since Snowden, there is a battle of cat and mouse between the government and encryption.

If you wanted to stay anon on Nostr you could run relays through Tor hidden services and access your client only through Tor.

Given the most popular relay already has Tor functionality (Nostream) this can be done now. Won't be long until a Tor setting in Nostr apps is the norm either. Until then you can use Orbot.

And good luck trying to regulate relays like the government is tryna regulate legacy social media. It's unenforceable. You can run relays from servers in Belize paid for in non-KYC coinjoined BTC and run em through Tor.

Yes the gov has levelled up since Snowden for sure but "we can code faster than you can regulate" remains truer than ever.

Indeed, the reason I got attracted to Nostr a year or more ago is because of the similarity with NNTP. It is that UseNet experience that I'm trying to recreate with the more-speech app.

>From: (Xannyeth) at 04/03/23 04:59:49 on wss://relay.damus.io

>---------------

>Outside of large corporations, the internet is and has always been free as in freedom. If you grew up in the pre-Facebook era you know it was a different place back then.

>

>Part of why I love Nostr so much is that it feels like a return to the internet I grew up with. No corporate overlords, no central control, just communities of people keeping their community alive as long as enough people pay the hosting bill.

Is that why you include the > quotes in your replies? It's a bit noisy for the reader... :)

See Below

>From: eykd<-NostReport at 04/25/23 15:01:58 on wss://relay.damus.io

>---------------

>Is that why you include the > quotes in your replies?

Yes, it allows me to respond to questions and statements in-line.

>It's a bit noisy for the reader... :)

It can be, so I delete them if I think they are extraneous.

Going by memory, it seems like you always leave them in. :) Might be better to default off, except when you need to do the inline response? Just my 2ยข. 2 sats? :D

It is interesting though: everyone else here is building Twitter or Facebook, and you're building Usenet. This is the kind of client diversity that Nostr promises: a world of loosely-joined ends. I love it.

I leave them in frequently. I also delete them frequently. It depends upon my mood.

And, yes, I agree. The range of applications is enormous. Nostr is not twitter, is not FB, is not UseNet. Nostr is a protocol and a community that is growing and exceling. I'm thrilled to be a part of it.

Now we just need groups! I don't see a NIP for that...

Is was better back then