I was chatting with another nostr user today and noticed the only relay we had in common was relay.damus.io. Removing it would make that user ‘disappear’, so to speak. I mean, I could broadcast my notes to him (one of my paid relays broadcasts to the Damus one), but I wouldn’t be able to see any of his new notes. It’s a delicate balance
That would be a good feature. It would be a convenient way to separate the wheat from the chaff
That’s an essential read for sure. Concise and straightforward, pretty much like Rothbard’s Anatomy of the State
Interesting. I’ve been tinkering with my relays. Even though most of them are paid now, I still need to keep relay.snort.social, for example. Removing it also removes a substantial part of my follows and followers 🧐
GM!
PV, GM! 🤙
Yep, it’s still there:

The nostr.relayer.se you’re using is free. It also broadcasts to other relays. Not sure which ones, though
PV!
Morning! ☀️
Snow and mountains go hand in hand very well. Here is just flat plains—a few small hills here and there. Very boring landscape. I need to visit the Alps during winter 🙂
Morning and PV! ☀️🌞
Nice! I’m in southern Scandinavia and there’s almost no snow here. Just cold and miserable as usual 🙂
Morning! ☀️
The team in my site is structured like a startup. Not many processes or guides in place. Whoever, the management is global or based on the usual regions (EMEA, APAC, US and so on). So, the conflict is obvious now that I think about it
Yep, the company I work for is huge. Present in almost every country and all continents
Yes, good point, there’s also the political aspect. Usually high management setting extremely tight deadlines or different priorities—which makes the whole work cumbersome. Maybe they should focus more on customer experience and less in pleasing the big shots (stakeholders)