I feel that sometimes people forget what an open protocol means. If something is truly open, it means that anyone can build anything that they want and no one party is in control. As a direct result, we're going to have applications and services that some people don't fully agree with or want to use. None of this is new. For example, if you didn't want to use Internet Explorer, the worst offending web browser of the last two decades, you didn't have to use it, but it existed and people used it to browse the web every day. The same will happen to Nostr and eventually the market will decide.
Discussion
An interesting difference is that instead of bending over backwards to make IE 6 work, content publishers can just blow off the nostr equivalent (unless of course we end up rebuilding the browser again)
True. Also, hopefully no client gains that large of a market share.
Wtf! What’s with this name change? You know how long it took me to find you 😜
What an intelligent guy, I thought,
I'm going to start following him - turns out it's just Erik the Derek! 🫤
💯