We have Bitcoiners they have shitcoiners.
Huge difference.
This is the best in-depth dive in to how bluesky works from a code / infrastructure perspective that I’ve seen. I think anybody trying to understand and build Nostr should take a look. In a ton of ways atproto and nostr are siblings in how they work. It’s all the same stuff but slightly tweaked and in different proportions.
We have relays, they have relays. Their events are defined by signatures of the event and so our ours. They’ve got some differences, Nostr does casual ordering by timestamp whereas they’ve got a kind of merkel tree as part of the event. Their clients talk to a PDS server which holds keys similar to nsec bunker, but it also acts as a personal relay, which we have but not everybody uses. Our labelers are any nostr user or bot, whereas theirs a specific cloud service middleware. We’ve got DVM’s and other middleware which can generate custom feeds, but it’s not needed, clients can do their own thing or decide sorting. Whereas custom feeds in atproto are more core and extensible.
They plan to add payments and a DVM type service, but haven’t gotten to that yet, where as we have zaps already.
Because of the way bluesky has control over who can connect to their relay and submit data to their servers, users on the main bluesky network have to receive their content with their moderate bot labels via both AI and the Ozone app.
Bluesky supports arbitrary datastructures and lots of kinds of apps beyond the twitter like microblogging, but as far as I know nobody’s built one. Where as Nostr has tons of weird interesting apps.
We have Bitcoiners they have shitcoiners.
Huge difference.
Having been there since the beginning, I actually think there are more bitcoiners than shitcoiners.
The overall community hates both and doesn’t understand the difference, though.
I left bluesky after about a month because I was sick of being publicly shamed for talking about bitcoin. Wasn’t worth my time or energy to argue and there were no other discussions happening that peaked my interest. Granted, this was early on when there were probably like 200,000 accounts. Don’t know if I’ll ever go back though. The community didn’t like those who didn’t conform to their ideals and they were mad that the protocol they were using would be open to everyone, lol.
Totally get that. I’ve stayed reasonably quiet about bitcoin while there, which is fine because I’ve got that content here, but I can attest that it is definitely getting better. More bitcoiners are slowly coming out of the woodwork.
Good, glad to hear that. I’m curious to see where it goes.