Profile: 01fff557...
What if the walls are realllly pretty?
They ask, though for now I think it is optional to answer on the form.
They already ask for your Twitter handle when applying for a US Visa. How long until they ask for your nostr pubkey?
Yes. I cloned the GitHub, checked out the latest release tag, then used the docker compose scripts.
This [guide](https://andreneves.xyz/p/set-up-a-nostr-relay-server-in-under) is now two weeks old and some aspects are not entirely accurate. [GitHub](https://github.com/Cameri/nostream) has all the steps that's needed.
Let me know if you need any extra help with these. I'm running nostream and followed the linked guide and then contributed to the GitHub docs so might have the right context to help.
To be fair the Headscale reimplementation is OSS, the problem is it's only unofficially endorsed by Tailscale so there's no guarantee of support.
The only thing I can see stopping them from doing this is reputation. It's easily trackable so anyone can see if they do this, and it would ruin their entire business. The alternative to trusting the business is to run your own coordinator, but that's even more effort than setting up NIP validated usernames so most people never will unless it's made into a one click process.
In the form provided by Raspiblitz yes. But Tailscale controller is closed source (Headscale is an open source reimplementation), while Zerotier controller is open source and you can host your own with the same code they run: https://github.com/zerotier/ZeroTierOne/tree/dev/controller
True. Hmm. Maybe we should advocate that these node platforms implement Headscale to help with this.
Raspiblitz already includes Zerotier which is a competitor to Tailscale.
We're early enough with Bitcoin that almost everyone will "roll their own" solution at some point. Even the tradeoffs between single sig with shamir vs multisig have no clear winner so it's still very easy to make mistakes.
It's a little simpler now I added instructions for running with systemd: https://github.com/Cameri/nostream#running-as-a-service
That's why #[4] is here to remind us how Twitter was in the early days