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daniele
7bdef7be22dd8e59f4600e044aa53a1cf975a9dc7d27df5833bc77db784a5805
Working on https://fevela.me, https://nstart.me, https://njump.me, https://oracolo.me and other inspiring nostr projects. I love to build helpful things that people are pleased to use, mixing tech, design, usability and accessibility.

Actually, I don't know. Probably to incentivize the use of hints. I need to check better.

If the note was sent to a relay that njump does not know about, it cannot find it and therefore converts it to a nevent. The note was sent to relay.damus.io?

Your mentioned a hex id, not an nevent. What take a long time to load?

All events or just the ones you created manually?

Maybe the first time? For me this url loads instantly now.

I don't see any https -> http redirect; actually the inverse redirect takes place.

nostr:npub10000003zmk89narqpczy4ff6rnuht2wu05na7kpnh3mak7z2tqzsv8vwqk i think something is wrong with njump. Since yesterday event pages take forever to load.

Try again now

Ok, now I understand the "time window" logic. I was thinking about the usefulness of the block hash alone.

Replying to Avatar Max

I recently caught nostr:nprofile1qqsdjyv3uv8qq3ztjskqaqk263ctx2h3w9mycgn4hmstmxfh0m75qagpz4mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuerpd46hxtnfduhsz8rhwden5te0wfjkccte9e5xjemgd35kw6r5v4ezucm0d5hszxmhwden5te0wfjkccte9ehx7um5wfhkx6m9wshx7un89u7vcg6t red handed in a time stamp scam.

He printed a t-shirt with only a block height of Nostriga, and when I told him that's not a proof, he admitted that in fact he printed the shirt weeks before and just picked an estimate of which block number will be produced during the conference.

He could not have included the actual block hash of the event before it was mined, because nobody knows the hash in advance.

If he wants to prove that the shirt was produced during the conference, add the time stamp of the block at the beginning of the event on the shirt, and add a picture of him wearing it in an open timestamp proof on the blockchain.

Hahaha, legit

Can you give an example where this latter attestation might be useful? Usually the need is to prove that something is _older_ than X.

In your note you said the inverse, adding the block hash as a tag. And I can actually create an event today, with yesterday's date, adding a yesterday's block hash.

Also for this haha!

But the main comment refers to the fact that while all moved from a real gun to a toy one, to critically contrast the rising gun violence, Microsoft chose the opposite path.

I just read that this happened *the day after* Apple announced the switch. Weird.

"Microsoft stated that the change was made to bring the glyph more in line with industry-standard designs and customer expectations"

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pistol_emoji

If you mean physically products, this would be nice, unfortunately you cannot sign or attest an object in the physical realm without an authority, see the art market or the counterfeit products one. It will be always possible copy a code and attach it to something.

Btw, do not pay for a code and cryptographically manage it, are some interesting incentives.

I doubt that too because, if nothing changed in the last year, Onyx refuse to release the kernel, violating the GPL

nostr:npub12rv5lskctqxxs2c8rf2zlzc7xx3qpvzs3w4etgemauy9thegr43sf485vg is there a way for the users of a mint to privately and cryptographically prove how much #ecash they own? If we can sum the values and check the result against a voluntary audit by the mint, the fractional reserve problem could be solved.

If possible, wallets could implement this automatically for the mints that join the scrutiny, so users would have a real-time check of the mint correctness.

I have a similar position: just target businesses and let them know that Bitcoin is a thing, a real tool, besides all the speculation/financial noise. Businesses are happy to optimize costs related to payments gateways; they are also always interested in searching for new niches to promote their offers, and I suppose bitcoiners will be seen as an interesting target in the next bull run.

Motivated business will create bitcoin customers.

In the meantime curious casual people will be triggered and maybe will fall down the rabbit hole.

The third, but make them smiling and transform the top splash of water in some leafs

#growingnostr

Great, and thanks for the generous zap.

Feel free to ping me for a further review!

And the EU SEPA (a sort of inverse bank wire where you charge the user account) is a joke too: if the customer account is empty or locked, a dispute is opened and closed in the same instant, the seller lost it and have to pay a chargeback fee of ~$10, plus the Stripe % fee on the amount, and the original transaction is rolled back of course. All this automatically.

This happens also if the customer open manually the dispute.

There isn't any valuation by Stripe.

This is a really important distinction.

(if correct; I cannot evaluate, I have to defer to crypto experts)