Once the NIP: Contextual Trust Attestations as the foundation for Web of Trust is implemented, you’ll be able to give a high rating to nostr:npub1qny3tkh0acurzla8x3zy4nhrjz5zd8l9sy9jys09umwng00manysew95gx:

to create content (the action)

in the category of freedom technology memes (the category)

When Alice (who trusts you to curate nostr content) looks for the best bitcoin memes, her Grapevine will promote ODELL’s work.

This is how WoT will enable new content discovery on nostr.

https://github.com/wds4/tapestry-protocol/blob/main/guides/grapevineIncorporation/NIP-proposal.md

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Discussion

We still need a cool demo to get people to implement this.

I’ve been dreaming up today the outline of a site that implements this NIP, which I just wrote 2 nights ago. I think it should be relatively straightforward. You’ll be able to view existing contexts (actions and categories), create new actions and categories, add parent-child relationships, and create contextual trust attestations.

And right now I’m (re)writing a document that outlines how a developer can implement this in any nostr app or platform.

https://github.com/wds4/tapestry-protocol/blob/main/guides/grapevineIncorporation/NIP-platform-adoption.md

The first step of which will be to determine the context(s) that you think are most relevant to you app.

Example: if you’re building a e-commerce site, your users will want to create trust attestations:

to rate and recommend products (the action)

in a variety of categories: electronics, food, books, clothing, etc.