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you ever used a wiki? they have these "talk" pages attached to each page in there, you can see relevant content how do i do that with PRs that are being developed but not yet finalised - or maybe finalised in implementation but nobody has bothered to attend to merging? it's a huge amount of friction, like @Laeserin so aptly described it - rubberstamping is causing a huge amount of problems for developers, just watched it unfolding this afternoon for @cloud fodder over the issue of mentions... nip-08... no, nip-27 - but wait, tags are defined in nip-01 please take a number and wait in line ser, this is a wendys
By that definition, a wiki is anything under source control. Wikis tend to have people assigned to "watch" certain pages, because they take a particular interest in the content or are some sort of expert, not one team managing the entire wiki site.
And that's still too much "asking permission", to me. We're working on increasingly obscure and niche OtherStuff implementations and I don't see why I have to give someone who has nothing to do with our project veto-rights over biomedical vector analysis or CAN bus communications or refrigerant logistics, etc. We're the experts. That's why we're building the implementation. 🤷‍♀️ And it starts lower down. Why do I need to discuss a publishing spec with people who aren't experienced with publishing or internal auditing? If they were experienced in publishing or internal auditing, they would be writing the spec. What does their approval even mean? Are they checking for typos?
This is what I mean by Stempelarbeit. The nice lady in the office has no idea if there was any point to the trip or if the trip was worthwhile or a good use of funds. She probably couldn't care less, that you took a trip and is just like *sigh* another stupid trip form to review. Those are 15 minutes of my life that I'll never get back. She's just in charge of stempling and giving permission. But, on what basis? In whose name? To what purpose? She is stempling because she has a Stempel. 🤷‍♀️
Do you want more administrative overhead or less? If you want someone to "watch" pages that can be done on the NIPs repo (again, wiki software is better, but not essentially different). But this is a massive increase in overhead. The NIPs repo contributors aren't there to debate ideas (although that happens too), just to vet whether a NIP has the requisite number of implementations, and merge corrections. This is a pretty lightweight role, but still quite taxing. If you want a permissionless wiki, then use the one that currently exists at wikifreedia. No one is stopping you. In fact, fiatjaf drafted https://github.com/nostr-protocol/nips/pull/1214, and to my knowledge I'm the only one so far who has published a NUD there. But this presents the opposite problem of potentially too little curation. I'm all for trying it, because forks are cool, but I'm not convinced it will be easier to navigate or more useful than the NIPs repo.
One more thing Write coding guidelines for the specs. Then rewrite all existing specs to match them, as close as possible. Then you don't have to have senior engineers saying "No json in the content field" or "make sure to use asciidoc or markdown compatible with asciidoc" to every new entrant.
i duno if a wiki would be much different. *unless it is organized wayyyy different. say, by Kind and client. like kind1, quotepost (here's what damus, amethyst, coracle, nostrudel, etc do).. maybe then each client or userbase could edit more freely or etc. i often wonder what kind is what, or if i make a new one, how often will there be a collision? and have each kind searchable with wiki tags like "drafts", "notices", "auth". and then link from there to the official nips. have comments on, etc. ya i was surprised mention didnt work, its been a while since i tried it. so i just had to find some real kind1 json to inspect fafo
james r's avatar
james r 1 year ago
there are quite a few people ignoring the NIPs repo and making standards elsewhere and it's impossible to find them
I've noticed that too. This is not hard to solve, if the person writing the NIP wants it to be found. They can do a NUD, or they can submit a PR to the NIPs repo to link to an external NIP, which is also something that exists. But if people don't want to make sure people know about their own standards, there's not much anyone can do.
there can be a transition first step is migrating the data into the new format next is keeping track of the way the data being put into it is disorganised, and especially investigating the actual code of those who are contributing to measure against what they have pushed to their PRs i don't think a whole new protocol is required, just some competent, adequately paid moderators who make sure vandals don't mess up the talk pages and make them useless it just really doesn't translate to a git repository do you want to have 65535 separate folders for kinds? they have to exist!
I agree, would be nice to have these things in a way that worked, but it's not really possible.
Do you know who is that person capable of meticulously classifying all the things all day every day? Also why can't we keep the current system but have that amazing person do the job on the side? It would be great and eventually people could naturally transition to the new document since it would be better and more complete as the person could also incorporate Blossom and other rogue specs that exist out there.
I do want someone to help organize this mess, but it can't be you, you're too opinionated and aggressive (which is not necessarily bad, but it's bad for this task specifically).
for example, a kind, could be 'managed' by a set of all client teams that implement that kind. when an implementation diverges, the kind is categorized into client sections or pages (depending on how combative). a page or section that describes a client implementation and is maintained by that clients team.. that way the updates can flow. people can subscribe to the kinds to get notified of changes to them (another pain point of the git strategy)
Sasha's avatar
Sasha 1 year ago
Sounds like ya’ll need excel or import to excel
it doesnt have to update the nip unless everyone agrees.. im just looking for more data on how things are used. right now i have to try every client, and i dont have an iphone so i have to find someone that does to try it for me. if it was in a wiki, this would help a lot. one example is quote notes. another is as i found today all clients need a "mention" in the tag to mention someone, yet this is not in nip01 all clients have already moved onward to some other nip that uses kind1 new ways. i also frequently search for nip-Xx or a, keyword, or kind # and github doesnt show results for it .. some of these specs have updated (like zaps?), so its not like they never do, and right now theres no feed for this. anyway, i know this would be quite an effort and require some hosting etc.. just brainstorming what might augment the git
Endorsements, weighted endorsements, how would that be different? How many forks and edits would be concerning? Popularity is likely power law distributed - find the one that is most popular and implement that, or you can try something else and let it compete with the rest. In any case:
liminal 🦠's avatar liminal 🦠
When devs break protocol image
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1) Most standards don't need to be found by most devs because they don't use them. Nobody uses all of the NIPs, either, after all, and that effect is about to go parabolic. I think everyone just needs to sort of give up on spec management. 2) It's not impossible to find them. There is a list in the wiki for events or you can simply use elasticsearch on nos.today. Or just #asknostr. Make a DVM spec discovery tool. 3) You can see the events popping up on relays and just search for the ones that seems stick around for a while and add them to the list yourself. This is dynamic discovery and someone already built it. 4) I don't need an event to announce the event that I'm publishing on relays and writing about in the wiki and in articles and discussing in communities. That's the same event being announced like 50 times and would encourage people to reserve NUD numbers that they don't end up using, or having NUD numbers assigned to unpopular events, like we have with the NIPS. This creates an ID "honeypot". 5) We don't need the "NUD". We have our own prefix. It's obvious that it is a Nostr spec, if it deals with Nostr and is a spec. 6) Implementations should lead. Marketing is proof of work. The best implementation will get the most attention and their spec will float to the top of the wiki or dominate the timeline for the people interested in that topic, and become the de facto standard. 7) We publish our specs on the wiki or other long-form articles, give the event a searcheable identifier, and then we implement it and talk about it all on Nostr. That gives everyone enough opportunity to find it, who is genuinely interested. https://wikifreedia.xyz/nip-event-register/npub1m4ny6hjqzepn4rxknuq94c2gpqzr29ufkkw7ttcxyak7v43n6vvsajc2jl
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Rand 1 year ago
bidetbutts have less opinion/ imho
You basically announce what you are doing. If others like it, then they will also use, even help refine it. Point me to the exact places in the spec to help me find information i need to know - an address. Or a comment someone said on nostr relating to the situation. Sure, things could be super mixed up, but you could weight opinions or endorsements to find the best way to find your answers. There are ways to filter out noise, or they will be found because of need. I wrote two specs on Nostr Knowledge Bases (NKB). How can we navigate nostr's information, on any event. I'm not a web developer, so I have 2 NKBIPs out there (wikifreedia), asking for fast feedback and quick iteration. If people really like an idea, but if its not actively being worked on, other's can still see and work with it. There may be changes, but wouldn't that be good? The original author can still be in the conversation.
I don't even understand the point of this conversation. We already moved all of the NIPs and the event register to Nostr's wiki months ago. I don't even look at GitHub anymore and I don't need to use some other wiki.
At that point, I'd also argue that naming should be descriptive. If you're not asking for change to the protocol, I don't see a need to stick to a convention.
I agree, we need some human to do this organization effort. If you know of know of anyone let me know.
Yeah, you basically need an index. That's the github nips repo README. Of course, it's incomplete because people don't submit PRs to it, but it's there. Wikifreedia's #nud tag or something else could also serve as an index. We just have a tragedy of the commons because these things (or some thing thing) aren't being used.
> We don't need the "NUD". We have our own prefix. Apparently, but this is the first time I've heard about NKBIPs. The least you could have done is mention it on the github repository. We're directionally aligned here, I just really don't understand the hostility toward the existing forum for talking about nostr.
YIL (yesterday I learned) about NKBIPs. Are these the same as NUDs? Apparently they've been around since February, but I had never heard of them.
i wrote it up as a draft spec originally on github - just to have it out there. I'm not asking any change to the protocol, but ideas on how events can be organized and retreived. Its been on github since December, but its gotten way more visibility and feedback here.
Cool, I missed it on github then. The spec on wikifreedia seems much more generic than NUDs, almost a competing spec to the wiki one. So maybe it's not as applicable as I thought?
Ok, so NUDs are a new idea then? What do you dislike about them? They seem to solve most of your complaints, in that they're: - Permissionless - Published in a wiki format - Forkable and can be voted on - Nostr-native
I'm not asking them to do anything. That's my point. They're the ones upset that major spec writers are starting to ignore the repo and document on the wiki, instead. We like the wiki better. 🤷‍♀️ I have no idea why anyone finds this hard to believe. Nostr > GitHub
I personally don't have a problem with the specific idea. An NKBIP can perfectly have a NUD tag if someone wants to add it, i just don't think it adds more meaning than NKBIP. Not an argument against a NUD, just that if things are already going to be so different, a global naming convention wouldn't make sense, and that NKBIP announces the purpose within its name.
As nostr becomes fragmented and lineages diverge, the definitive NIP repository will be the developer circle you are a part of. There is nothing wrong with that. Be interoperable with your friends or just use your own relays.
This is all by design in a decentralized, permissionless infrastructure. The github nips repo works for a circle of developers, of which many take influence, and would like to contribute but doing so on a permissioned platform is getting annoying. There is nothing wrong using it as the defacto repository or a model for "The Nostr" local to everyone that wants to take influence. The problem is that nostr is too good and using any other system is starting to get painful (damn you developers! ✊). Just let the ideas compete with other specs. Make a whitelist relay where you and others curate and incubate the ideas. Others could fork on their own relays, but no one needs to listen - unless it actually makes sense for the client. Ultimately, its a public announcement of "i'm using this spec" and you don't need to leave nostr to be part of the "official" conversation.
I basically agree, but I don't think people are spending the necessary time on making sure consensus works. Fragmentation is ok, but the target is maximum interoperability, not maximum fragmentation. Everyone making up their own specs is an unbalanced approach, just as running everything through one permissioned source is unbalanced. Of the two, I personally prefer the github model, because it's proven to work, while the bizarre bazar is untested. But I'm willing to participate in experimentation with a middle ground.
Okey doke. If we want this to go global, we’re going to need some type of governance. We had a similar discussion at #SEC02 when someone started to design a protocol that was ‘better than #nostr’ but not compatible.
Generic is the point, i wouldn't say it competes however. A wiki has a spec for their articles. This spec is attempting to distil ideas individually so they can be worked with an grouped together. It comes with a 30041 which is very related to wikis 30023, but 30041 are just fragmented notes - and wouldn't be typically be shown by themselves. 30041 basically is an indication that it belongs to something broader - you can decompose a existing blog or paper, or you can just publish a modular article with the explicit concept that the ideas can be separated. You'd show them as a modular article, or note collection, via 30040 which can be a collection of any event type. I wouldn't expect any client other than what we are making to display the individual fragments.
You could say the same of all software. Just because slack doesn't talk to discord doesn't make them members of the same protocol. Interoperability doesn't happen by accident.
Maybe you're arguing that standards can be inferred by published events. Sort of. I think that was always the goal for NIPs. But that's like saying documentation isn't necessary, just go read the source code.
Static documentation isn't necessary, it's true, but it's useful marketing material or a basis for discussion. Nostr has a built-in incentive for people to use other people's events, so that they can capture part of the same audience. An open protocol is a novel idea whose time has come. We're just embracing it.
Standards are necessarily centralized, you can't have each person use their own standard.
I think standards will evolve organically, the apps that want to be compatible in the ways that are important will talk and make it so. the nips repo is no longer reliable and nips are edited at will without discussion. It has become meaningless except for the core nips.
GitCitadel also has a private group, now, at https://coracle.social/groups/naddr1qvzqqqytlgpzqzp7p4ekweu59qlue8u46gtfjm30w33r527zr6n2hz89ejg4cnyxqqgrywfjx5cnxvfexsursv3hxccny2z3luq/ but I can only seem to login to Coracle using nos2x with Kiwi browser. Nos2x with chrome and Nos2x with firefox and anything with Amber, all seem to not work. 🤷‍♀️ I can't figure out what I'm doing wrong or why it worked in that one particular case.
It pops up four time. A fifth time if you post a note. It forgets them all if you close the tab.
That's nos2x-fox, not my code, not my responsibility, I am forever free from having to fix that bug.
What is the bug? nos2x definitely stores your preferences when you tell it to always authorize. I think it should not open a million popups even if the website asks for a million signatures, but maybe there is a bug on that part.