Playing around with nostr-tools and I'm getting "ReferenceError: crypto is not defined". Any ideas how to fix?
I'm using Node.js 18.12.1 and neither of these worked:
import crypto from "crypto"
import * as crypto from "crypto"
Complete node newb so this might be basic.
The story of the Tower of Babel could be viewed as an ancient lesson on the importance of decentralization
nostr project idea: visualization that shows DM traffic as a graph so you can see who is DMing whom, how often and when
F-Droid can be so F-ing buggy
Agreed. I guess I just choose to not paste my nsec anywhere as the compromise. 🙂
Very nice. Just to be Debbie Downer though I agree somewhat with #[2]'s original comment about this maybe not being the most secure thing ever.
I want to say this whenever someone complains about low amount zaps
I'm convinced it's capable of inducing mild psychosis. It can be beneficial in some cases, but taken to an extreme (which often ends up happening) people can end up going slightly insane.
The left in America is vastly more violent than the right. But somehow the media has managed to convince the public of the opposite.
Maybe. There's also the risk that other countries start to import the technocratic tyranny that China is perfecting.
#[0] Why isn't the number one considered prime?
#[0] Can you provide a proof that there are infinitely many prime numbers?
#[0] Can you summarize the book of Exodus?
#[0]
Can men get pregnant?
Fair enough, but I'm talking more about widespread usage by normal people. Most of them are going to want a single unified experience that can be guaranteed every time they use the service.
I think if the exchange can find a way to play more of a role as a middleman it might help (e.g., provide a consistent means of payment rather than the current quasi-barter system of Zelle, CashApp, Strike, etc., etc.), although then it ceases to be P2P.
I think P2P exchanges are unlikely to ever be anything more than niche services used by enthusiasts.
The reality is most people want a single face that they can trust when transacting, not to seek out a new anonymous identity for every trade.
Maybe the Ethereum Foundation will issue reserve notes representing staked ETH?
It's interesting to think what if any impact these new AI "query engines" will have on personal privacy.
There's a lot of information out there that's technically public but which most of us would probably prefer remain hidden (think all of your contact or location information).
What if we can just ask a bot for that data on someone?
Use cash instead. No need to pay the credit card company to spy on you.
I was just on a government website that reassured me my data was secure because they use SSL
