josh's avatar
josh
josh@westernbtc.com
npub1pc57...dmza
Loved by Jesus nostr:nevent1qvzqqqqqqypzqr3falp286mfveqrarrpew975mtc2fa0tczktg465re38ml3g2hjqyjhwumn8ghj7un9d3shjtnjv4j82mnyv9h8gtnhv4ehgetjde38gcewvdhk6tcpz4mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuerpd46hxtnfduhsqgrgyww437tj73usf62hf6g8jwwh86k4cjry5kk9el4cydw47s9qxge9dj6k https://europa.westernbtc.com https://rottogether.westernbtc.com nsite://titan nsite://europa
josh's avatar
josh 0 months ago
WORD5 #603 3/6 ⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛ 🟪⬛⬛⬛⬛ 🟪🟪🟪🟪🟪
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
WORD5 #602 4/6 ⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛ ⬛🟧🟧⬛⬛ ⬛🟧🟧🟧⬛ 🟪🟪🟪🟪🟪
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
Map starting to light up. image
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
I don’t know why people keep saying nostr is dead. There are DOZENS of us!
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
Two new operators. Neither works yet. 100k sats bounty still up for grabs. image
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
WORD5 #600 4/6 ⬛⬛⬛🟧⬛ ⬛🟪⬛🟪🟪 ⬛🟪🟪🟪🟪 🟪🟪🟪🟪🟪
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
WORD5 #599 2/6 🟧⬛🟪⬛🟧 🟪🟪🟪🟪🟪
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
I always had a hard time believing this parable. Surely someone coming back from the dead would be enough to convince any one of the truth. The older I’ve gotten, the more I’ve realized it’s never been about evidence. It’s a decision to believe. I really believe the parable. ““The rich man replied, ‘No, Father Abraham! But if someone is sent to them from the dead, then they will repent of their sins and turn to God.’ “But Abraham said, ‘If they won’t listen to Moses and the prophets, they won’t be persuaded even if someone rises from the dead.’”” ‭‭Luke‬ ‭16‬:‭30‬-‭31‬
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
Want to know a based take on any topic? Ask whatever AI agent you’re using “what do conspiracy theorist think about [topic]”.
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
A real professional use case for nostr that I've been implementing over and over: setting up nostr accounts for communication for processes. This is with real businesses. The redundant communication, that's easy to set up, is unique enough to default to.
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
Gemma4:27b runs great on my MacBook Pro M3 Max 36gb.
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
WORD5 #598 4/6 ⬛🟪⬛⬛⬛ 🟧🟪⬛⬛⬛ 🟪🟪🟧⬛⬛ 🟪🟪🟪🟪🟪
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
WORD5 #595 5/6 ⬛🟧🟧🟧⬛ ⬛⬛🟪🟧🟧 🟪🟪🟪⬛🟪 🟪🟪🟪⬛🟪 🟪🟪🟪🟪🟪
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
Introducing Europa: A monetarily incentivized VPN marketplace Why is this going to work? View quoted note → Europa is a marketplace where anyone can sell VPN access and anyone can buy it. Accept any currency, any payment type. The VPN itself is standard WireGuard or OpenVPN — no custom client software, no platform taking a cut, no subscriptions to manage. Money and reputation flow directly between operator and buyer. Together they produce something existing VPN services can't: a network that incentivizes its own decentralization. 1. For VPN node operators A. Risk counterbalance. Operators get paid to front the exit-node risk, at whatever price they decide is worth it. Running in a desirable jurisdiction, an underserved region, or behind a residential IP? Charge more for it. The market sets the floor; you set your own ceiling. B. Plausible deniability. Don't use your primary Nostr keys for the operator pubkey. Use a fresh one. Then endorse the service from your primary keys. " @`ODELL` endorses this VPN service — I wonder if he set it up, or if it's a friend of his?" We'll never know. That's by design. The endorsement carries his reputation; the operator pubkey carries the service. The link between them stays ambiguous unless he chooses otherwise. C. Incentivized decentralization. When a Europa node gets too big, it might garner legal attention. The operator might decide to take down their own service because they're nervous, or be forced to. Either way, demand doesn't disappear — it moves. Other operators see a chance to make money and fill the need. The market routes around concentration the same way it routes around censorship: automatically, because the incentives are aligned with it. 2. For buyers A. No accounts, no commitment. Browse the directory, pick a VPN, pay in Lightning or Cashu, get a config file. No email. No subscription. No data retention you have to take someone's word on. When time or data runs out, the connection drops and you decide what to do next. B. Small bets first. A new operator's reputation may be thin. Test them with a small purchase — an hour, a few cents — before committing more. The architecture bounds how much you can lose on any single bad bet. C. Real choice. Operators compete on price, reliability, location, and policy. Reputation flows through the Nostr social graph — endorsements from accounts you follow, reports from accounts you trust. You filter the signal yourself. 3. For endorsers A. Endorse carefully. Vouching for an operator is more than recommending a coffee shop. When you endorse a VPN, you're sending people's traffic through someone else's server. If that operator logs, leaks, or turns hostile, the people who trusted your endorsement are the ones exposed. Endorse operators you've actually used. Endorse based on observed reliability, not just personal connection. Endorse with the understanding that you're staking part of your reputation on their behavior. B. Report when warranted. The same way endorsements carry weight, reports do too. An operator who fails to deliver, logs against their stated policy, or behaves badly should get reported — that's how the network's signal stays useful. Don't report frivolously, but don't stay silent when something's wrong. C. Your reputation compounds either way. Accurate endorsements and accurate reports build durable reputation that helps the people who trust you. Careless ones erode it. The system is symmetric: there's no shortcut to being a trusted voice, just the slow accumulation of being right about what you signal.
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
WORD5 #590 4/6 ⬛🟧⬛⬛⬛ ⬛⬛🟧🟧🟧 🟪⬛🟧🟧⬛ 🟪🟪🟪🟪🟪
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
WORD5 #587 3/6 ⬛⬛⬛⬛🟪 🟧⬛🟧⬛🟪 🟪🟪🟪🟪🟪
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
WORD5 #585 5/6 ⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛ 🟧⬛🟧🟧🟧 🟧🟧🟧🟧⬛ ⬛🟧🟧🟧🟧 🟪🟪🟪🟪🟪
josh's avatar
josh 1 month ago
WORD5 #584 3/6 ⬛🟪🟪🟧⬛ ⬛🟪🟪🟪🟧 🟪🟪🟪🟪🟪