Task 14 is live on PLS WoT: Trust Path Graphs
Ever wondered if someone is trustworthy, even if you’ve never met them?
Now you can find out.
And yes, we’ve got a demo video showing how it works.
We’ve built a trust graph that shows the web of trust between any two Nostr keys.
Think “friend of a friend”... but cryptographically signed and reputation-based.
https://blossom.primal.net/419a327809deecff3e6c464920861962d9d0924806f99861580ed3ec08e99dd9.mp4
In the demo, nostr:nprofile1qy88wumn8ghj7mn0wvhxcmmv9uq36amnwvaz7tmwdaehgu3wvf5hgcm0d9hx2u3wwdhkx6tpdshsqgqt3pxsm4evxllqmw6283pzh7xdvvhmp0w8heghf8j5tfzf4w74fgew7hsq (the graph dev) checks the trustworthiness of nostr:nprofile1qyx8wumn8ghj7cnjvghxjmcpz4mhxue69uhk2er9dchxummnw3ezumrpdejqqgr5r5yt5jq8n0a9udalty6jq96afvf8rdl2t5nfwrjf3m5zvxdfws8uh5s3 (one of the first arbitrators on PLS) from his own perspective.
Even though they’ve never interacted directly, the graph reveals a clear trust path between them.
Then, Calango removes all nodes he doesn’t trust.
The graph updates, and one user drops out, trust is filtered.
He goes one step further: enables a filter to show only connections between people who have done business together.
The result?
A customized, subjective view of who’s trustworthy, based on who you trust, and who they trust, and what actually happened between them.
This is more than a social graph.
It’s a new layer of reputation for decentralized coordination. And it’s live.
Explore the trust graph and find out who you trust, even if you don’t know them (yet).
👉