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Lion Diet Leo
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Naked hiker, pushing my body to the limits. Meat only diet, barefoot lifestyle. Primitive skill enthusiast, programmer, techie, node, and relay runner. Omnitheistic atheist. Perpetual archetypal Fool seeking wisdom and enlightenment. One day I will climb Olympus Mons.

Good question!

You find that out through a process of self-discovery. The first step there is to note what events in your life still hold sway over you. They might be things you feel ashamed, guilty, or angry about. You dive into those and ask yourself questions about what your agency was regarding those events (i.e. what you did to cause them), what made you feel those emotions, and how you would act now if those were happening right now with your current knowledge and agency you have today. Usually these will be events that still have emotional charge for you even if they happened over a year or two ago.

Next step is to notice your reactions to things happening in real-time. This is a bit hard to describe in this format, but the goal is to find any patterns in your behavior which might potentially cause you to undermine yourself, your goals, and relationships. You'll eventually notice patterns of behavior on longer time scales. These will clue you in on what it is that you unconsciously worship.

A somewhat easier path is to have someone you trust tell you. Other people notice these things much faster than we do ourselves, but take their input with a grain of salt, because they don't know what's really going on within you in order for you to exhibit a certain behavior. Their input is bound to be their own projection onto you, but will always come with a nugget of truth which is yours to find through introspection.

I found that looking into my dreams also gives clues on this journey, but dreams are a bit tricky to interpret for yourself. If I find the dream confusing I will ask an AI nowadays to try to crack open some of the symbolism of the dream. Usually that gives a good start, but it's rarely a meaningful, actionable interpretation. Handing the dream over to someone familiar with working on dreams is helpful.

Hey, nostr:nprofile1qqs8eseg5zxak2hal8umuaa7laxgxjyll9uhyxp86c522shn9gj8crsz2g4gy , I made a pull request for relaycreator, interested in feedback.

Also you said you wanted to add influxdb... what did you need it for?

Good morning, #nostr!

I just missed my ride to Mars. 🙁

Replying to Avatar cloud fodder

lmao, damn, #roasted 😂😂😂 by https://nostr-personality.vercel.app

Roast: Oh cloud fodder, your posts read like an innovative novel filled with techno-optimism and the occasional existential crisis. You started your journey with the "bright future" of Nostr and yet find yourself trapped in a vortex of client developers who think 'sacrificing lightning' is the key to popularity. "It has to do this to serve notifications, yeah" — well, one can only wonder if you hope for notifications on an obsolete tech. You seem to possess a PhD in 'Speculative Development', as you weave ambitious theories about decentralized networks while wondering if you've turned into a ghost yourself. The tale of your midnight escapade during a 'ghost bear' sighting is quite the twist; who needs sleep when you've got Nothing-to-Report Carnivore Drama unfolding at your doorstep, right? Among the chaos of relays, bots, and spam, your idealism about micropayments makes you sound like the last kid on the block dreaming of a bicycle when everyone else is hopping on electric scooters. Maybe take a step back and breathe; the Nostr world might be out to get your sanity, but at least you're not letting it stop your dreams of fine-grained relay selections. Nevertheless, if only those 'reply guys' knew they were targeting a mastermind of relay reshaping instead of just a concerned user. By all means, keep theorizing because if there’s anything we need more of, it’s 'cloud fodder'—that’s you, relentlessly seeking solutions while others fight over the chicken park bench.

"LionDietLeo is an aspiring crypto philosopher with a flair for sarcasm and practical solutions, probably spending too much time pondering life's great mysteries while troubleshooting annoying tech."

Nice one!

I'm kinda not feeling sad for this guy.

He's like one of those that drive on the highway in the wrong direction and then gets squashed by a truck.

There were sings - everybody told you "wrong way", everyone warned you, but you just kept going, giving out a seed phrase on demand when everyone told you "nobody legit will ever ask you about your seed phrase".

It's survival of the fittest.

A couple of years ago I bought a helium miner. Had to buy an antenna and a cable (which was a separate kind of hurdle since almost nobody here had the kind of cable I needed, and when I'd found it I couldn't find suitable crimps to install connectors on said cable).

When I'd finally installed it all, I'd nearly forgotten about it except for a couple of times, usually around the time when I was changing my ISP. Once I needed to manually install some firmware and it was good that I did because the company I'd bought the miner from seems to have vanished off the face of the Earth afterwards - only a semi-functional website remained of them.

Anyway, yesterday I pulled some helium I had mined on it and it just about covered the initial costs of the installation. But hey, the thing had stopped mining helium and is now mining solana. I have about half the worth of helium I had before converting to BTC - in solana now. Nice!

You can always scroll your feed on nostr. 😅

GM, #nostr!

Some of you have great insights to share first thing in the morning.

Not me.

I'm dumb when I wake up.

Or maybe I just notice it better in the morning.

Here are all the #bitcoin seed words. Someone recently commented on this list claiming that it's rather short. So let's see how secure it is.

With this list, even the shortest seed phrases of only 12 words give a vast search area for a potential attacker, with 10^39 order of magnitude search space. While generating a seed phrase is relatively easy, the cryptographic algorithms needed to derive a private key from the phrase are resource-intensive. In addition, for each private key generated from a randomly generated seed phrase, an attacker would have to scan the blockchain to see if the wallet is funded. If they were to scan the blockchain in this manner, they would be rate-limited and detected long before they even had a chance of finding a valid seed phrase.

Even if they ran a full node (the only viable option), the demand for resources would be huge, and scaling the attack, they wouldn't be likely to be able to test more than 100k - 200k seed phrases per day.

Theoretically, however, if an attacker could somehow test 1 million phrases per second, in order to have a 50% chance of guessing the phrase of just one funded wallet (assuming there are 50 million funded wallets today), they would have to run the attack for 2.39 * 10^19 years (that is 23.9 quintillion years). And this is for 12-word seed phrases only!

In addition, some wallets allow for a passphrase (a so-called 25th seed word) which is chosen by a wallet's owner and an adds another level of security, making any attack an expensive and hopeless endeavor.

So rest easy, your bitcoin wallets are safe.

Looks like blocking words is the only way for now... until he changes that too.

Ooh, I did not notice that.

He kind of failed to post replies on my last post (or I didn't see them) so I thought I had blocked him successfully.

If you're using FreeFrom Android client you can easily block the reply guy by clicking on the three dots on his post and select "block user".

He has multiple accounts so just block them all.