I was describing Nostr as "The New Internet" and it didn't even occur to me that most people don't actually know what the Internet is.

I think we need to start at the beginning.

All the way back.

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Having used "the internet" since 1975 (still have the first protocol spec), I would define "internet" as peer connections carrying IP protocol.

We also had uucp net, which was a transport independent store and forward network. We collected all known peer connections in a text file and ran a graph analysis overnight to optimize routes (bang paths) to destinations.

Today, no one seems to know what a "peer" is anymore. From questioning people about what the "internet" is, I get the idea they think it is their web browser. I.e. HTTP(S) is the only protocol they care about (and indirectly though unknowingly DNS and TLS CAs). Even smtp, they have only experienced through some web client (usually gmail).

The term "protocol" is unknown - except in classical schooling groups where they practice social protocols at formal dinners, concerts, and other events. This is relevant, and a starting point.

NOSTR PEERING is somewhat analogous to BGP PEERING which is backbone current Internet

Internet TCP/IP was pioneer FOSS protocol why it survived other proprietary protocols didNOT - IBM SNA , DECnet Novell-Netware, X.25 ...

Windows(comercial but HARDWARE foss) , Linux n TCP/IP survived

Yeah, my dad is a network engineer from the late 70s, so I think I forget that most people arrived after everything was already there.

They didn't watch it get built.