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Evelin
evelin@snort.social
npub1l2gv...r0gm
🇦🇹 Love privacy & Freedom of press
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Evelin 8 hours ago
multisig für nostr den nsec in mehrere Schlüssel zerlegen, dann kannst ich einen verlieren und mein nsec ist trotzdem sicher. Hört sich gut an. (Ob es auch einfach ist, sag ich euch dann. Ich probier es aus.) Weil - das wäre dann ja wirklich cool und für nostr Firmen npubs super! Dann könnte ich einen Schlüssel einem Mitarbeiter geben. Und falls der Mitarbeiter weg geht, dann generiere ich einfach neue Schlüssel. Oder habe ich das falsch verstanden?
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Evelin yesterday
Ich glaube, ich habe es verkehrt rum aufgeschraubt 😅 - egal - läuft trotzdem. image
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Evelin 4 days ago
This is the so-called "Chuscht" - a kind of pass-through between the kitchen and the living room, designed to avoid trudging through (the cold) "Vorhus" (front hall) with dishes and drinks. It’s also a sort of household intercom. 😏 People back then were truly ingenious.
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Evelin 5 days ago
Water of Memory This old house breathes with stories, its walls saturated with whispers of generations past. Countless souls have crossed its threshold, their footsteps echoing through time. Beside the room's door, marked with a simple cross, hangs the holy water vessel. My late aunt's mother would always dip her finger into the ceramic bowl, tracing a gentle sign of the cross on her daughter's forehead before she rushed off to elementary school, pulling her close for one last embrace. But children are always in a hurry, and my aunt was no exception. That day, she darted out quickly, her mind filled with childhood thoughts and anticipations. When she returned home at midday, her mother had passed away. She carried this moment with her entire life - the regret of not holding her mother just a moment longer. Whenever I look at the holy water vessel, her story resurfaces, a delicate memory etched into the fabric of our family's history. Today, as my own daughter was about to leave, she suddenly turned back. With a familiar gesture, she reached for the holy water, traced a quick sign on her forehead, and pulled me into a tight, unexpected embrace. (I cannot recall ever telling her this story.) And yet, she carries her great-aunt's name within her own. Maybe a silent thread connecting generations, remembrance passed down through blood and love.