Thread

Zero-JS Hypermedia Browser

Relays: 5
Replies: 4
Generated: 16:01:42
Two of my favorite books are How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie and Influence by Robert Cialdini. Both outline simple truths about how humans operate at the OS level, and they apply directly to what we are building on Nostr. Carnegie teaches that you should never criticize, condemn, or complain. People do not change when they feel pressured or shamed. They change when they feel welcomed and understood. If we want zap culture to grow, we cannot guilt people into zapping or tell them they are doing it wrong. Criticism kills curiosity. Encouragement creates participation. Cialdini explains the power of reciprocity. Humans are wired to return value when they receive it. That is exactly what a zap represents. It is not a transaction. It is gratitude. It is acknowledgment. It is someone saying, “What you did mattered.” When people receive something meaningful, they naturally want to give back. It is healthy to have constructive conversations about culture. That is how we expand our understanding and improve what we are building. What is not healthy is falling into Twitter style arguments where anger and fear are used as fuel. That type of engagement corrodes trust, destroys momentum, and turns communities inward. Human nature always shows up, for better or worse. The question is which part we choose to amplify. If we want a thriving ecosystem, we need to keep building each other up, not tearing each other down.
2025-11-30 16:19:25 from 1 relay(s) 3 replies ↓
Login to reply

Replies (4)