It is good to take care of privacy. But I believe that the biggest problems in social networks are misinformation, pedophilia, inappropriate content, manipulation of third parties. How do you plan to combat all this?
@@Midori_Hoshi it's not really that simple. The world needs free speech, but we also need safe spaces as well. As nostr evolves I imagine relays without moderation policies will be less used. The greatest improvement is the removal of for profit algorithms. I actually believe with nostr we can make safer spaces than those that exist in traditional networks.
@@hannabussb Just give the users options to block or mute or hide certain topics or people they don't want to see. Problem solved. For example, a message board could have a section for Republicans to be assholes in, and if you don't want to see the horrible bullshit, you can hide it or choose not to go there. As bad as Republicans are, we shouldn't do censorship.
@@Midori_Hoshi I understand your point of view, but in reality this doesn't address the problems with the current social media that is ripping societies apart. This is a really hard problem. You have to accept that large groups of people are vulnerable in different ways. "Just block" isn't a solution. This just creates more information bubbles.
Please don't bring either your love for censorship or technological fantasy such as AI into this: You have your "safety" on Twitter, stay and enjoy it there. This mind control stuff has no place here, no matter what terrible pretext some people want to continue it under.
@@JesusSalazar-kv7mn On Nostr? Probably not since I'm not aware of it being encrypted, the focus appears to be more on decentralization and hosting. For privacy, at least from the low level guys, I'd use Matrix chat.
Control your keys? Seriously? 63 random letters??? How do you imagine this. It's crazy and impossible. Nostr is too complicated and raw for mass adoption.
I literally only had to input an username and was automatically logged in and using the platform: Unless you're running a node or client yourself, it's actually even easier. Just replace username / password with public / private key and that's it.
@@linsqopiring6816From what I remember since last time I tried it, most are web based so no. Nostr seems to go one step ahead of Mastodon and use the model I was hoping for, by being not just decentralized but distributed: The platform itself is a locally ran interface which can be hosted and accessed from anywhere, it connects to a list of nodes which do require software to run but isn't necessary for the end user just those looking to support the ecosystem.