That doesn't make much sense. There are tons of protocols that define cryptographic keys for ownership. You could use any of them to build a privacy-first stack. Nostr has a lot of benefits over them for other things, but in the privacy realm it doesn't really add much compared to these other protocols.

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Maybe, but that is all you need to build a verifiable, open, privacy stack, and it is an inherent property of nostr. I think we've reached the point in discussion where we're just arguing semantics, which is fine. I can agree to disagree here.