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Julio Santos
56fff0a8bd6a54973f39edf70ce058e4495d2a8024e2caf1c965822fc2f3dca2
nostr:npub1p79dx59d5gctllar73cqnucqft89gpkfmydxj4mmk2jj69s7hn3sfjatxx

Nos USA existe voz de negro e voz de branco, no Brasil isso não faz sentido

Nesse vídeo de 3 minutos tem a explicação do sistema

https://youtu.be/uCmkXGvlu3w?si=ufb6G2fepZ7qd2f1

Today I signed my first real contract at the Private Law Society!

It's happening!

Creating a Private Law Society, in which each person commits only to what he can commit to, that is, he signs contracts according to the assets he has to offer as collateral, is the closest thing to liberty there is.

Many contracts that exist in the state are feasible solely because individuals, in order to "participate in the state system," give up their freedom as collateral. However, while this argument may seem hyperbolic, it holds true.

State justice only “works” because, eventually, the state retains the authority to apprehend individuals, regardless of their consent.

So, a Private Law Society means more than just choosing the contracts you would like to sign, but knowing that you will never give up your freedom as collateral.

Several types of contracts that the state can enforce are only binding because individuals have something very valuable as a guarantee: their liberty.

Thus, take part in a Private Law Society involves acknowledging that certain "solutions" will no longer exist.

Yes, living in liberty, in this regard, presents greater challenges.

Yes, living in liberty is fairer in all aspects.

As a matter of fact, defending liberty means refusing to surrender it as collateral.

People creating nostr users to sign contracts on PLS and not specifically as a social network

uso no pc, não sei se tem mobile

eu coloquei no modo dark e tirei aquele verde padrão, melhorou em partes

Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

This a really good post from Jack.

Part of the answer might just be time. The tech is real, people are building on it, and it takes time for people to be burned by permissioned systems to discover permissionless ones now that they exist.

I do think that bitcoin wallet + social graph is a big combo in the long run. The fact that you can just look up and pay anyone you know without that person taking action to tell you their payment details, especially in an open source and international environment, is a pretty big deal. Not just zaps as tips on posts, but zaps for Nostr marketplaces or for saying “pay me on Nostr” for products/services unrelated to Nostr per se.

And for the social network part, I just like the fact that Nostr is permissionless and open. Twitter has a huge network effect and I have plenty of friends/connections there, so I still post there a lot and use it for research as well. That is irreplaceable until it is not. But Nostr feels different. The tech feels right, the group that adopts that tech early feels right, and so to me it feels right to post things here that I would not otherwise post to 675k Twitter followers. Less filtered, for better or worse.

I used to be involved with individual small forums back before widespread social media was a thing, and was an administrator for one to help run it, and that type of smaller community was valuable. In fact, I inadvertently met my now-husband there 13 years ago, who was also an administrator. The forum had fewer than 50,000 people, with only a few thousand active at any time, but in context that is the size of a significant town.

But while Nostr still has the “feel” of a smaller forum now, its open source and permissionless nature gives it enormous expansion opportunity. While programmers do their best to build new features and capabilities, I try to seed this current smaller version of Nostr with unique content that doesn’t feel right to post in a larger centralized setting but feels more right for a smaller decentralized community of adventurers.

Because I want permissionless and open source tech to win. nostr:note19aldr26lyw2lqatcgqscyt3kpq76hcpwtwmglypvqqgx3m27fsaswa8rr6

This makes a lot of sense!