there is a moderated communities spec, it's an alternative to that

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

cross sections of the community can be moderated if viewed from the perspective of moderated relays that host content from that community

Sorry but I am not a dev and I need simple language from the POV of the users.

What is a community in NOSTR? Where do you create it? And if I got it right if the community is putting content that does not want any moderation this spec will allow it to be uncensorable even by relays. Do I get it?

There is no singular definition of a community on nostr. I am proposing one of many alternatives.

in this model noone can stop you from posting to a community. the community would exist as notes spread across different relays.

there could be a canonical relay list associated with the community, but there could be forked or hidden parts of the community on unofficial relays. these are just different views of the community associated with the sha2 id of the community.

nostr:npub1xtscya34g58tk0z605fvr788k263gsu6cy9x0mhnm87echrgufzsevkk5s Nackoo’s frame of reference is a admin/moderated telegram community with channels.

Non-moderated generally means no admin.

However, if you are running a relay on which the community operates there is an admin capability (i.e. can whitelist, blacklist etc).

nostr:npub1xtscya34g58tk0z605fvr788k263gsu6cy9x0mhnm87echrgufzsevkk5s does your spec envision a community that can be run solely on one relay, or multiple relays?

this is all covered in https://github.com/damus-io/notedeck/issues/788 so far

specifically:

- cross sections of the community can be moderated if viewed from the perspective of moderated relays that host content from that community

- in this model noone can stop you from posting to a community. the community would exist as notes spread across different relays. there could be a canonical relay list associated with the community, but there could be forked or hidden parts of the community on unofficial relays. these are just different views of the community associated with the sha2 id of the community.