Last Notes
Your Nostr setup should not depend on overloaded public relays.
Azzamo Premium gives you write access to wss://relay.azzamo.net and expanded Blossom storage for media uploads.
Built for people who actually use Nostr.
https://dashboard.azzamo.net
We've been chasing private messaging on Nostr for years. NIP-04. NIP-17. NIP-29. Our own Universes. Marmot. Every one taught us something, none of them was the whole answer.
Now it is. Encrypted communities, no company in the middle, and we run our entire team on it.
It's built on the Concord Protocol by the Vector team, @npub16ye…g4wn and @npub12w7…ktz3, who pivoted from Marmot to their own protocol.
@npub1q3s…d26p worked with them on v2, and we ran with it.
A tip of the hat to Flotilla @npub1jlr…ynqn for leading the NIP-29 charge, too.
I wrote the whole messy, honest story, including the dead ends.
https://soapbox.pub/blog/building-an-armada-voyage-to-encrypted-communities
Really excited for the launch of Orange Juice today. Been working on this for over a year and think it’s going to be a great way to bring Bitcoin to main street.
https://jeffreybooth.com/articles/the-case-for-sound-money
My mum loved flowers. Her ashes will be buried in a garden, which is poetic and wonderful. Every time I see a flower, I have to think of my mum. "She would like that one," is what I say to myself. "She would've liked that one," is what it will turn into, given some time.
I was with her when she took her last breath. "I love you," is what I said. Last moment. Last movement. One last breath. She saw my daughter the day before, and she smiled. It was her last smile.
We live our lives as if they wouldn't end; as if there was no last breath, no last smile, no last anything. But there is, and that's what makes everything precious. Every interaction, every word, every breath, every goodbye, every smile.
There is a last everything. But for as long as we are, there will be flowers.
I saw a flower today. "She would've liked that one," is what I thought. And after some time, it will transform again. "She is that one."
She is that one. https://haven.dergigi.com/ae93d9eb6cd3c54c7743ce94226244b5926265d9afae1deb58b9b0c249ad577a.jpg
Trouble. #grickledoodle #cows #meat #vegetarian #cartoon #art #drawing #funny #horror #humor
https://media.mstdn.social/media_attachments/files/116/924/830/006/784/740/original/57b115718c690994.jpeg
😂
https://blossom.primal.net/ff5ff72f25c545ab291271fd627813b3c7a54a2b77884cbbe9efbbce129c4d19.png
Paying your farmer in bitcoin is the highest use of hard money
https://blossom.primal.net/a1c268776b080800855d7cbd06b02dafedf9855a852efe9d50f5add1fef8845a.jpg
My impression from reading more about the EU Digital Wallet project is that it originally had nothing to do with age verification. It was supposed to be a handy tool for a digital drivers license, for opening a bank account online abroad, making a digital signature, etc..
For such applications the privacy trade-offs were probably fine. Sure, the Dutch government can see that you just opened a German bank account. But they'd be notified of that anyway.
Where it gets more dubious is the requirement that large social networks support it for login. Then the government can see which accounts you have. And lock you out of them!
But realistically nobody would use that, it'd be some obscure option on the signup screen.
But then it got hijacked by the age-verification gang, headed by Von der Leyen herself - so coming straight from the top.
Because these apps will (initially) be the only way to do age verification, they go from a niche option to the default and effectively mandatory. And so what a started as a handy way to open a bank account after moving abroad, turns into a mass surveillance and censorship machine.
None of this is excusable, and the people voting for it knew (or were willfully ignorant, no moral difference) this would happen. But it's useful to understand the dynamics.
https://youtu.be/4VRRriyDKKk
Becoming.
https://haven.dergigi.com/d1960bbf0a4adcabb7047c507fe61aad2cbfea4c1cb03868cea0c2dc8d2eb5e2.jpg
A shoutout to all plants growing through the concrete 🌺
https://media.tech.lgbt/media_attachments/files/116/921/043/980/897/108/original/ef5588e950c0e800.png
Guess who's back? https://bitcoinexplainedpodcast.com/@nado/episodes/aaron-and-sjors-discuss-whats-new-in-bitcoin-core-v31
Bitcoin Plebs Defending The Network (BIP-110)
https://blossom.primal.net/c5752425fa3809adfcc1b56277eb022b928afcdf0acdf80ab3a02baa7301025c.mp4
Estela is the founder of the farmers market where @nprofile…ksf9 began.
Her story is incredible & we’re happy she’s still here to tell it.
Her story is one of the many examples of financial exploitation that @nprofile…ynf4 explains so eloquently.
https://blossom.primal.net/c011694daf56585b2d887e84e2b9783ed32b3b1f3d946c61e87d2063b692e02b.mov
GM.
Private equity funds generally aim to buy a business, cut costs, and resell it in 4-7 years with an indebted, hollowed-out balance sheet. It’s an important source of liquidity for business owners but has some well-deserved criticism. Companies that recently exited from PE have higher bankruptcy rates.
As an alternative, we’ve started a company called Orange Juice that seeks to buy private businesses, optimize where helpful, and hold them indefinitely. Instead of hollowing out their balance sheets out with, we will back them up with a bitcoin treasury.
https://www.lynalden.com/orange-juice/
New: the highly controversial AI music generator Suno was hacked. The hacker sent us Suno source code; it shows the company scraped YouTube Music, Deezer, and Genius. In all, Suno scraped *decades* worth of music from the internet. Obviously didn't pay artists https://www.404media.co/hack-reveals-suno-ai-music-generator-scraped-youtube-deezer-and-genius/
https://media.infosec.exchange/infosec.exchange/media_attachments/files/116/924/374/518/268/148/original/fb779f2855cd06a3.png
Banks Said No. Bitcoin Said Yes. How "Born To Be Free" Was Financed Without Selling a Sat
At @nprofile…4kkp, I sat down with John and Nadja of @nprofile…c3zz, an all-natural, tallow-based skincare brand built from scratch on a Bitcoin standard. They shared how traditional banks turned them down for a loan despite an 800 credit score and a profitable business, and how Ledn's Bitcoin-backed loans help them fund their business without selling a single sat. It's a real-world look at how Bitcoiners are using tools like Ledn to access liquidity, grow their businesses, and stay true to their low-time-preference mindset, without giving up their stack. @nprofile…jf2l
→ Get 15% off “Born To Be Free” products, using code EFRAT: https://oshi.link/1nvZYq
→ Access liquidity without selling your Bitcoin, get 0.25% off your first loan: https://ledn.io/Efrat
https://blossom.primal.net/2aa78692403f985f70cc06f8ba37d26ef6c7b9423743794ce01ff890dec686a1.mp4
People keep misunderstanding what BIP-110 is trying to do because they keep listening to liars and gaslighters.
The biggest misconception is that BIP-110 is merely a technical proposal to stop inscriptions or limit OP_RETURN. It isn’t. At its core, BIP-110 is about preserving Bitcoin’s social contract.
Every monetary system is built on shared expectations. Bitcoin is no different. It exists because millions of people coordinate around a simple idea: Bitcoin is money. That shared understanding determines how developers write software, how businesses build products, how governments regulate it, and ultimately why people assign it monetary value in the first place.
Within Bitcoin there are many competing interests, all pulling in different directions. Some want censorship resistance. Some want digital collectibles. Some want permanent data storage. Some want financial settlement. These competing visions are ultimately reflected in two places: Bitcoin’s consensus rules and the default policy of its dominant implementation, Bitcoin Core.
Until the end of 2025, both pointed in the same direction: Bitcoin is money.
With the merge of Bitcoin Core v30, that changed. By expanding the default relay policy, Core officially acknowledged an additional legitimate use case: data storage. Consensus rules didn’t change, but Bitcoin’s default social signal did.
That distinction is critical.
People often respond, “Even if OP_RETURN is restricted, there are still many other ways to embed arbitrary data.”
That’s true.
But those methods remain hacks.
A hack is an attack. It’s fundamentally different from an officially supported feature. Hacks exist despite the protocol, not because of it. They carry uncertainty. They can disappear at any time. They aren’t endorsed, documented, optimized, or defended by the ecosystem.
That difference matters.
If arbitrary data storage is treated as a legitimate Bitcoin use case, the network becomes an obvious target. Attackers no longer need a costly 51% attack or legislation banning Bitcoin itself. Instead, they attack everything surrounding Bitcoin.
They target wallet developers.
They target node operators.
They target app stores.
They target exchanges.
They target infrastructure companies and miners.
Most importantly, they attack Bitcoin’s monetary narrative.
If Bitcoin becomes widely perceived as “a blockchain for storing arbitrary data,” governments will increasingly judge it by everything anyone chooses to publish forever. That dramatically expands Bitcoin’s regulatory attack surface while weakening its identity as neutral money.
Money derives much of its value from social coordination. Weakening that coordination weakens Bitcoin’s monetary premium.
This is why the social contract matters.
BIP-110 doesn’t eliminate arbitrary data forever. Nothing realistically can. But it restores an important norm: storing arbitrary data on Bitcoin is an abuse of the network, not one of its intended purposes.
Everything else BIP-110 achieves is secondary.
Yes, it would severely disrupt today’s inscriptions economy. Existing businesses could adapt, but they would have to rebuild from scratch on far shaky foundations. Every future project would need to ask itself whether Bitcoin is really the right platform if its business model depends on behavior the network deliberately refuses to support.
That uncertainty alone changes incentives.
Many discussions around BIP-110 get lost in technical details. But Bitcoin has never been governed by code alone.
Bitcoin is also governed by narratives.
That’s why influential figures like Saylor, Fink and a whole entourage of government sewer dwellers spend enormous effort trying to redefine what Bitcoin is. Digital credit instead of money, digital asset instead of a cryptocurrency, digital gold instead of a payment system. The dominant narrative can either make or break this protocol’s future.
If the dominant narrative shifts from “Bitcoin is money” to “Bitcoin is a general-purpose blockchain,” Bitcoin begins competing on entirely different terms - against platforms that were designed for exactly that purpose.
That is a battle Bitcoin should never choose to fight.
People often dismiss BIP-110 as irrelevant, unnecessary, or dead on arrival. Yet many of those same people invest extraordinary effort attacking it every single day.
That contradiction should make you stop and think.
If a proposal truly has no chance of succeeding, why devote so much time and energy trying to stop it?
The effort betrays the intend.
#nevent1q…9r5g
Governments around the world are making age a condition for accessing certain parts of the internet.
Our Age Verification page tracks where such laws are in force, where they are advancing, and how different countries are approaching the same policy goal.
Equip yourself with that knowledge 👇️
https://proton.me/age-verification
Delisted from exchanges, banned from on-ramps, attacked by regulators, and still the default currency of every serious darknet market.
https://media.sambent.dev/img/e545182d3ce49278.jpg
Let me present you what could be the future of JoinMarket and hopefully a great tool for Bitcoin privacy and fungibility.
First of all, there is the motivation. JM makers have an onchain fingerprint, that although it's hard to follow, limits the privacy achieved by the takers. The full details are at https://gist.github.com/m0wer/a228c625fcb6a27c32e298ec903dfc44
But to save you some time, here the main problems described there are: unique enough maker fees, co-spending of inputs, makers never spending, ... Which in the worst case scenario, would mean that a pure onchain observer could potentially cluster some makers across mixdepths and reduce the anonymity set by one of CoinJoins where they participate.
So what can we do? Well, we can use this chance to bring JM to the next level. And create such a transaction graph "mess" that becomes a chain analyst nightmare :-)
Let me explain. We can't ever get fully rid of the links between UTXOs onchain, or at least not without a way more complex multi taker model that leads to Knapsack "dense" transactions. But we can strive for something, that is that no single party ever has all the information.
The idea is the following. JM makers could become Lightning Network swap providers. Like Boltz, like SwapMarket, like electrum swapserver. Using Taproot swaps and advertising through Nostr. LN swap users get a simple and trustless client side web UI, makers get "fresh" UTXOs from onchain->LN swaps and the opportunity to "spend" CJ outputs for LN->onchain swaps. Oh, and another source of fees. LN swap users get cheaper swaps from the increased competition.
But this is not enough. We need to break the subset sum analysis onchain. We want to stop maker clustering from the root. Here is the next idea, JM CJ participants (makers and taker) could get their change as an LN channel open. Or two, with random other peers and the change amount split randomly between both channels. So a maker that has a 10 M sats input in a 5 M sats CJ no longer gets just a clear ~5M sats change, instead, two LN channel opens where the balance is hidden. Maybe 2M sats in one and 3M sats in the other. But an external observer wouldn't know. Not even which channel is whose!
You could say, well, but an active attacker could probe those channels balance. Maybe, but not really. Those channels would be private simple taproot (HTLC based, not PTLC yet unfortunately), so not advertised to the network. And, BTW, onchain they look like any other P2TR output BTW. Advertised only when needed with a SCID alias that does not reveal the onchain UTXO. But hey, who knows, maybe some peer node that gets the SCID could try to probe it. Fear not! There's another ingredient coming to the mix.
lnproxy is a great service to hide the destination node of an LN BOLT11 invoice by having a relay/proxy node wrap it. The payment hash is the same, only the recipient can settle the payment. But whoever sees the wrapped invoice sees the relay/proxy pubkey instead of the destination one.
Why not decentralize lnproxy through Nostr and then makers can be lnproxy providers as well? Just to add a little bit more noise to their LN activity and help move the balances around. So that if these change as channels ever close (cooperatively) the onchain fingerprint those not help understand what happened in the opening CJ. Or that UTXO can still be used as CJ inputs if signed cooperatively. Or, of course, as LN channels for swaps of lnproxy. Some kind of noisy spin of CoinjoinXT.
What we need for this and what we're currently working on at jm-ng:
- A JM taproot only pit.
- Decentralized lnproxy.
- Decentralized LN swap providers.
- Protocol wiring for the change as channel CJ coordination.
- People to actually use this and not be overwhelmed by the complexity.
But if we manage to make this work, we will have awesome onchain and LN privacy. And a way for service providers to earn money anonymously by providing privacy to others. So it's definitely worth a try :-)
Voie lactée au-dessus de la Namibie, par Stefan Lieberman
https://npub1rgv9mjzenmfjkktfaghh7va30ycsmjjln3ksynmyw5m3cd5em77ql2av9x.blossom.band/c09fdbda6bfe6749de90f87c17d52791df4177a3d8102b5ba918dbbfe15687f7.jpg https://npub1rgv9mjzenmfjkktfaghh7va30ycsmjjln3ksynmyw5m3cd5em77ql2av9x.blossom.band/0951743ad5ae2c4d60062547973a555e6476b2595956d70a55bdbae03e97d574.jpg https://npub1rgv9mjzenmfjkktfaghh7va30ycsmjjln3ksynmyw5m3cd5em77ql2av9x.blossom.band/26314457029e3ef4422ad05f8501f02425ed39212ad57f37de8005ba79b4cd8e.jpg https://npub1rgv9mjzenmfjkktfaghh7va30ycsmjjln3ksynmyw5m3cd5em77ql2av9x.blossom.band/1d766e7e5a14b99ff2fa8b265ef7d5af9a5a5e89b64db23d880390f8493ccd44.jpg
#Astronomie #VoieLactée #Namibie #Astrophotographie #CielNocturne #Espace #Galaxie #Nostrfr
I’m about to tear you all to the Core and tie you up in Knots if y’all don’t stop fighting.
Happy birthday to me! 🎂
I am filled with gratitude for the incredible friends who have stood by me, championed my vision, and helped turn our shared dreams into reality. It has been a journey defined by the meaningful community work we have accomplished together to uplift those around us. Seeing the growth in our local youth through our various educational and recreational programs fills me with such pride.
My birthday wish this year is to reach our crowdfunding goal on Geyser Fund to purchase a pickup truck for farm-to-market logistics, which will be a huge step in achieving our logistical sovereignty.
I am stepping into this new year with a renewed commitment to our collective growth. Thank you for walking this path with me!
https://geyser.fund/project/drivingtheloop?hero=calvinjuma https://blossom.primal.net/06b6e2484ad1f463c7d200ca4a864ef32583f19b299a14376a58200691384d05.jpg
#Birthday #Community #FutureWithin #Gratitude #Nostr #Logistics
Half cow of grass fed beef secured in bitcoin for @nprofile…rf20 🍴🪙 🥩 🐄
Sourced from Brass Family Farms in IL!! Y’all better come and taste it 😉
Shake your rancher’s hand 🤝
https://blossom.primal.net/ae5de31c4169a9658784f270ed6231b90d0338413d48a89e106f4444a52ec8db.jpg
https://blossom.primal.net/e2ab605a336b2c9e568352ff95c9b6937d726fc341923c13e398c2b5ff1c0bf9.jpg
The network stays decentralized because random people in basements run nodes, and you should be one of them.
https://media.sambent.dev/img/08d96096fef1cd22.jpg
🎉 Good news for UK citizens - NO VPN BAN 🎉
Today, the minister for AI and Online Safety, Kanishka Narayan, announced that for now the government would not take any action to restrict VPN's in the UK.
But because it may be off the agenda for now, it does not mean it will be forever. Therefore, we at Tuta will continue our fight for privacy 💪❤️
Find out what other countries are planning bans as a means to 'protect the children' → https://tuta.com/blog/age-verification-kills-anonymity
Picture credit: Big Brother Watch
https://files.mastodon.social/media_attachments/files/116/924/116/190/077/110/original/7661b66735bcbd6d.png
WaPo reports the POTUS is expected to make a televised address tonight in which he will argue that foreign intelligence threats have undermined the security of our elections -- and specifically the one he lost in 2020 -- and that this means the federal government should take over elections which are managed by each individual state. The president has tried to hold up every major recent action by Congress in order to cajole them into approving a new law that would require proof of citizenship and and ID to vote in this year's mid-term elections.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/07/14/trump-plans-prime-time-speech-2020-election-allegations/
Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va) just issued a statement outlining the facts about the 2020 election and the current election infrastructure. I'm pasting part of it here because it's a good resource for anyone following along and for reporters who have to write about this unfortunate chapter in our nation's history. It's also a preemptive rebut to and probably a preview of what we'll hear from the president this evening.
"Foreign adversaries routinely seek to influence U.S. elections. They spread disinformation, amplify political divisions, intimidate voters, incite violence, and attempt to undermine Americans’ confidence in democratic institutions.
What foreign adversaries have not done, according to repeated public, unclassified assessments from the U.S. Intelligence Community, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), the FBI, the Senate Intelligence Committee, and bipartisan state election officials, is alter vote totals, hack voting machines to change election outcomes, or compromise the integrity of the 2020 presidential election. The clearest pattern across recent elections is not successful vote manipulation – it is sustained influence operations, aided and abetted by domestic actors, designed to convince Americans that their elections cannot be trusted.
These facts matter because conspiracy theories about stolen elections cannot become a pretext for weakening our democratic system or stripping states and local election officials of their longstanding constitutional role in administering elections. The answer to foreign threats is to strengthen election security, support state and local officials, and combat foreign influence operations – not to “take over” or federalize election administration based on claims that have been repeatedly investigated and debunked.
Reporters have a unique responsibility at this moment. The press is the only profession expressly protected by the Constitution because the Founders understood that an informed public depends on a free and independent press willing to separate fact from fiction and hold those in power accountable. Regardless of the source seeking to amplify false narratives about American elections, journalists should approach extraordinary claims with the same rigor they would apply to any other allegation: demand credible evidence, consult the extensive public record, engage subject-matter experts with experience tracking foreign intelligence operations, and provide audiences with the full context of repeated findings from the Intelligence Community, federal cybersecurity officials, bipartisan state election administrators, audits, recounts, and the courts. Careful, evidence-based reporting is one of the strongest defenses against efforts to undermine confidence in American democracy. To that end, we have assembled the following reference guide to help reporters quickly evaluate some of the most common claims about election security against the extensive public record developed by the Intelligence Community, CISA, the FBI, bipartisan state election officials, audits, recounts, and the courts.
Claim: China interfered in the 2020 election to help Biden.
Facts: Under the leadership of then-Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe, the Intelligence Community assessed that China considered but did not deploy influence efforts intended to change the outcome of the 2020 presidential election. By contrast, the IC assessed that Russia conducted influence operations aimed at denigrating Biden and supporting Trump, and that Iran conducted efforts to undercut Trump and sow division. The Intelligence Community, Department of Justice, and Department of Homeland Security all agree that there was no changing of votes or compromise of the integrity of election infrastructure in the 2020 election. Even the Minority View included in the public 2020 Intelligence Community Assessment – which assessed that China may have undertaken some modest influence operations – concurred with the overall IC assessment that there was “no information suggesting China tried to interfere with election processes.”
Claim: Venezuela, Dominion, or Smartmatic hacked voting machines.
Facts: In November 2020, President Trump’s own CISA, working alongside state and local election officials from both parties, declared the 2020 election “the most secure in American history.” CISA stated there was “no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes, or was in any way compromised,” and highlighted the extensive safeguards built into U.S. elections, including paper records, audits, recounts, certification, and pre-election testing.
Claim: Georgia proves the machines were wrong.
Facts: Georgia’s post-election audit showed the opposite. Because the presidential margin was so close, the state conducted a full manual tally of all presidential paper ballots. The Georgia Secretary of State, a Republican, reported that the audit confirmed the original machine count accurately identified the winner, with differences within the expected range of human hand-counting error.
Claim: Foreign interference means votes were changed, or elections are illegitimate.
Facts: This claim conflates two different concepts. The IC has repeatedly warned that foreign adversaries conduct influence operations, including hack-and-leak operations, disinformation campaigns, and efforts to undermine confidence in U.S. democracy. But those assessments distinguish influence from interference such as alteration or manipulation of ballots, vote tabulation, or voter registration.
Claim: Foreign actors can easily flip a federal election.
Facts: Both the Senate Intelligence Committee and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) have said the decentralized nature of U.S. election infrastructure makes large-scale manipulation very difficult to carry out without detection through intelligence collection, audits, cybersecurity monitoring, and physical security controls. This assessment was reaffirmed by DOJ and DHS in a joint report on the 2020 U.S. Federal Elections – a report mandated by Executive Order 13848, which was signed by President Trump himself in 2018. Indeed, federal funding – much of which took place through appropriations bills under President Trump’s first term – helped shore up the security of state and local election systems in advance of the 2020 U.S. Federal Elections.
Claim: States cannot be trusted to administer elections.
Facts: The Founding Fathers thought otherwise, assigning the responsibility for election administration to states in the Constitution. As a result, elections are administered by more than 8,000 state and local jurisdictions, making centralized or outcoming-shaping fraud extraordinarily difficult. Election security relies on multiple independent safeguards – including but not limited to paper ballots or voter-verifiable paper records, bipartisan poll workers, post-election canvasses, audits, recounts where appropriate, and certification by state and local officials. The federal government’s role has historically been to provide intelligence, cybersecurity assistance, and voluntary best practices through agencies like CISA, the FBI, and ODNI (notably, resources the current administration has curtailed) – not to run or “take over” elections. A bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee investigation recommended more support for state and local election officials, not replacing them with a federally controlled election system.
Claim: Dead people or non-citizens voted in large numbers, or there are more ballots than registered voters.
FACTS: These discrepancies are usually attributable to clerical or data issues, and while there are occasional isolated cases, multiple comprehensive studies have found that noncitizen voting is vanishingly rare. Notably, under President Trump’s influence, many GOP-led states have withdrawn from the Electronic Registration Information Center (ERIC) – the nationwide clearinghouse to assist states in improving the accuracy of voter rolls.
Claim: Mail-in ballots or ballot drop boxes are inherently insecure.
FACTS: CISA notes that states employ multiple, overlapping safeguards for mail-in and drop-box voting, including voter signature verification or other voter validation methods, ballot tracking, secure ballot handling and chain-of-custody procedures, ballot reconciliation, and post-election audits. The specific safeguards vary by state, but they are designed so that no single control is solely responsible for protecting election integrity. Importantly, mail-in voting has traditionally been a critical method of ensuring that military personnel can exercise their right to vote and has been commonplace in many states for over a decade.
The factual record is clear: Foreign adversaries try to influence Americans and undermine confidence in our elections, but unclassified government assessments and state audits have not shown that China, Venezuela, or any foreign actor hacked voting machines or changed vote totals in 2020. The real threat is not that Americans’ votes were secretly flipped; it is that foreign adversaries and domestic actors continue to spread false claims designed to make Americans doubt legitimate election results."
The U.S. Bitcoin industrial complex very active and focused on this BIP-110.
Why? Because they are pursuing regulatory capture while simultaneously seeking control of the network through more subtle, subversive means.
BIP-110 is a response to that strategy. Its purpose is to preserve (and, where necessary, reset) Bitcoin’s core principles so the network remains resilient and true to its original design for generations to come.
⚡️⚡️🔂⚡️⚡️
Double zaps for reposts that reply here🧡👊🏻🍻
https://blossom.primal.net/22846192e77aabff1f2d26b9ad298d6b3fd98ab64c91eb35c685164888e534fe.jpg
#nevent1q…rq47
Overcome the injustices. Recognize the privileges. https://haven.dergigi.com/ecc273b31ef72ae2f5da8c95e2a15da97e0eb177a1b9844d56ada5298db952cf.jpg
はやい
https://prtimes.jp/main/html/rd/p/000000009.000178219.html
Now I am a FED along with Luke and Mechanic. Good sign. We are gonna make it folks. #bip110 is real
https://npub1mgvmt553uphdpxa9gk79xejq3hyzh2xfa8uh6vh236nq78mvh74q8tr9yd.blossom.band/c8b8d133f1af12d7214a196589e0403cc4261003eae5f23a4cfd12e6921390b6.jpg
⚡️🇨🇭 NEW - Proton VPN just shared that it received 47 legal orders through June this year, all seeking to identify users behind specific server IPs and timestamps. Every one was denied, because its no-logs policy leaves no connection data to hand over.
Per its transparency report, updated July 14, that brings the total since 2019 to 458 orders, with zero fulfilled. The company keeps no connection logs under Swiss law, so there is nothing to produce even when an order is binding.
https://blossom.primal.net/ef05cb760cc9eef884acd6e87e618063d2b471ec54d6aa832b10f9c91aca01e2.jpg
https://blossom.primal.net/6d263e57a1713bc59ba810737104164eeb6cde49ef08999f06e5d0f8b94d6319.jpg
I am completely done having lnurl on my nostr profile and I never wanna touch lightning again. lightning is disgusting. complete waste of my life. dumbfucks just send me israeli spark nickels and all I can do is shove them into nanogpt to pay for a chinese robot.
The UK tried to ban kids from social media, then immediately realized they can't enforce it without restricting VPNs. Now they're backing off.
You can't enforce digital restrictions without breaking everyone's privacy tools.
https://blossom.primal.net/e2b6b829e90bf4396d0bc37b3c3d1c9e8b0554fe15207003f390ee6a21caf1fe.mp4
https://blossom.laantungir.net/3ad3647c22176e5bef7cd6275643bf3927df8c9639f8dfd7221f4880e2e8e117.jpg
https://blossom.primal.net/fe65b4d77e15d801bdcfa1f23c1d6412d35dc6cab16a20b461d659d3d04f3266.png
Mention:
@BitBetBot higher
or
@BitBetBot lower
#Bitcoin #BTC #Lightning #Nostr #PlebChain #BitcoinOnly #StackSats #Zap #Prediction #BitBetBot
The reason why no KYC is so important is because even if you self custody, you can still be compelled to give up the keys. They have more than a $5 wrench.
If this wasn't true then governments wouldn't hold so much bitcoin
But they can't compel what they don't know about
Praise God she is well and there was no more cancer
Der Ausgangspunkt Gospel
Der Ausgangspunkt soll bei der Frage liegen: Wie kann unsere Gesellschaft
aufgebaut und strukturiert werden, damit sie unseren Kindern eine gute Gemeinschaft
bietet? Als gute Gesellschaft möge die Fähigkeit gelten, unsere Kinder zu wahreren,
klügeren und besseren Menschen zu machen, als wir es sind. Es ist eine Freude
anzuschauen. Ausgangspunkt jeden politischen Handelns wird so die Frage nach der
Zweckhaftigkeit unseres Handelns für unsere Kinder. Das ist ein radikaler Wandel
der Perspektive.
#derKUEKeN #Kinder #Verantwortung #Zukunft
https://npub1er8k8059xc6fea8djd5f0d74smwlhceepu9a8hml02q0hpnfrnlq2xff35.blossom.band/9769ca011eee078d27dec4a84ab36c72a6dcef75b41d1d7cd12347155d4a40d4.mp4
GM. Good signal today.
Zap Zide #Nostr #bitcoin #GM #nostrich #zapzide
https://blossom.primal.net/d5ff28cb72a11575718531e296915114cd1e4c5c5538b66e0a198875136c1278.jpg
https://cdn.nicecrew.digital/5b/59/e3/5b59e3c6089940a9046c325eff190ee089da379a6139eab0533cd675865b58ae.jpg
⚡️🇺🇸 NEW - AIPAC is in panic mode after launching a new ad targeting Thomas Massie as he pushes to end billions of dollars in U.S. aid to Israel.
AIPAC admits that cutting the funding would weaken Israel.
"That investment is under attack."
Cut off all funding to Israel immediately.
https://blossom.primal.net/ace9d98fe40566b4d16fcae585f861c9dab9c446996998e8824fac0dbbb7f644.mp4
New pages for Beth's comic! I know, I'm being pretty rude this time, but not all comics can be the same; some are cute and romantic, others are more rude XP And these girls fit with this theme, so I hope you like it! n_n
if you want see this and much more exclusive content support me on my fanbox and Unifans :)
https://g-reaper.fanbox.cc/
https://app.unifans.io/c/grartist
#loli #lolicon
https://media.baraag.net/media_attachments/files/116/926/689/118/024/844/original/e0be24da4c7e8338.jpg
https://media.baraag.net/media_attachments/files/116/926/689/545/429/867/original/6f70c2384eea58ad.jpg
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#Monero is money that pedophiles can't extort from you.
https://blossom.primal.net/31b5855e3338836f9758222270dea97c5ab9653353470972a6e583aceb61b078.jpg
BCH is going down again. Do you think it could drop back to $198? If it does, I'll just wait for a lower price before buying. This is probably my best chance to earn from trading again.
I also checked Cauldron and I'm waiting for FURU to drop as well. Even a small profit is still a profit.
By the way, if you haven't voted yet, I'd really appreciate your support. Please vote for my campaign using the link below. If it's funded, the 200k sats will be used to tip community users. Thank you!
https://bchnostr.com/crowdfund?campaign=3be9e91125a17b189937c5f79bc0baf28e99131947849a38fc8ece9d2c6da01b
https://npub166umclwjcgclvfa07g0nqunaztzvzjqjpmjqame9rqh3xyd8t6espa9dyn.blossom.band/800e2c93a572559b066109ac18182562976ad2e4fb9b6dd0c6b2cc4536577f00.png