Holepunch Inc, the company, ceases to exist, or pulls the app from the stores.
For 99% of iOS users, that is effectively the end of their holepunch expereince. They cannot invite friends (who also not tech savvy) to install and join them for a chat, and if they lose their local copy of the app (get a new phone, etc.) that's the end of their own connection too.
Yes 1% might compile from code and install via their own personal testflight or whatever, but when talking about general adoption of decentralised tools there is no sense talking bout that 1%. Most people don't even know what the word "key" means, let's not forget.
iOS is a stawman argument, it's a small platform with limitations, where as the other platforms can keep installing if holepunch disappear
The vast majority of normies (or semi-normies, seeing as normies aren't there yet) using Holepunch are using Keet on iOS.
I myself am not interested in protocols that normies will never care about. Sure some tiny number of developers can do whatever they want with some open source code they pulled from Github before a repo went down. But that's of very little interest to me, it's essentially little more than an open hackathon.
Developers are fond of saying "you can just do this" and "you can just do that" but we all know that normies will never ever "just do" these things.
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