Avatar
fondue
b43dfbd42541ff26c5f49d02b798c7f2a78627429cfddec8c197efe9ac3c0026
A coffee a day keeps the doctor away #espresso #cappuccino #latte #latteart #coffee

GM. It is, even if I can’t nail down that latte art…

Flirting with keto? Honestly, when I did that, I’ve been disappointed by all those keto substitutes I tried. Some are ok, some resemble the original non-keto food somehow, but none come even close to the flavor and texture of the real thing.

Not that they are bad, but when I expect to eat a pizza, the chewy, airy pizza crust, the taste and smell of that fermented dough makes up most of the sensorial experience. A keto pizza will never be a pizza, even if it’s delicious nonetheless.

It’s much more rewarding finding new real delicious original keto recipes and not trying to resemble non-keto food that you love, because it’s very likely it will end in disappointment and going back to the real thing eventually.

I am just guessing here, as I don’t know the insides and I am curious about these things too.

I assume that censoring in a specific relay is perfectly possible as the notes are public and I relays can probably implement any kind of filter they want and decide which note to keep.

About how notes get distributed around the nostr network, it’s a mystery to me. I think relays are not connected to each other, so I have no idea how it works.

And finally: of course you can (and should for the reasons above) add multiple relays and your notes will be published on more than one. What I did in the beginning, was look at which relays users that I found interesting were using and add them to my client.

I think the more important question is: how do you trust the nostr client you’re using?

All those clients that you put your nsec in so you can post, can steal your profile and there’s nothing you can do about it. There is no password to change. Once they have your nsec key, they own your profile forever and can do anything with it.

I might be wrong, but as I understand it, you don’t need to trust a relay. It’s just a messenger that brings you notes, and the notes are signed by the private key of the account who wrote it.

I imagine it’s like PGP signed emails. The signature is what guarantees you that you’re reading the original and unaltered email and it does not matter how you received it.

Please correct me if I’m wrong, #nostr experts.