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Why should your ISP listen to some random gossip on nostr?
you're right, makes no sense at all.
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20 sats \ 3 replies \ @ek 27 Mar
The only thing that makes sense is for nostr to create its own network like tor, i2p, cjdns and probably many more that nobody has ever heard of.
But "nostrnet" won’t replace clearnet (DNS+IPv4+IPv6) where 99.99% of all internet traffic happens.
It’s just going to be another tiny network that only a few people care about.
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yep, like a mesh network, that make sense.
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But a nostr relay for example still needs a domain on clearnet or an .onion on tor network, will it always be the case?
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10 sats \ 0 replies \ @ek 27 Mar
Bootstrapping a new network is not easy, yes.
That’s why I replied with #926803.
Btw, sorry if you thought it was rude, but I thought it was funny and I really want to laugh again in a year.
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no they don't. But somebody else (from a gov agency or whatever) can see your posts and then if you link your real identity on nostr they can just go to your ISP and demand to be "liberated" by your internet access.
Internet ID is coming fast... and all these rhetoric of "decentralized nostr" is falling down to who is going to allow you to use internet.
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