You don’t understand Nostr the moment you arrive.

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You don’t understand Nostr the moment you arrive.
At first it feels confusing. Too many clients. Too many names.
Amethyst. Yakihonne. Primal. Damus. Jumble. Nostur.
They’re all good in their own way. But only after trying several do you begin to see what’s really happening.
And then it clicks.
Nostr isn’t a social network. It’s what comes after social networks.
Here you don’t choose a platform. You choose the client you prefer.
You don’t follow an algorithm. You follow people.
You don’t have an account owned by a company. You have a key. And that key is your identity everywhere.
If an app shuts down, you’re still there. If a relay disappears, your content flows somewhere else. If you dislike an interface, you simply change the door — not the house.
Recently I tried many clients.
Amethyst. Yakihonne. Primal. Damus. Jumble. Nostur.
All solid. All interesting.
But the first one that really made everything feel right for me was #Wisp (thanks nostr:nprofile1qqsw9n8heusyq0el9f99tveg7r0rhcu9tznatuekxt764m78ymqu36csxjejf ).
And that’s the quiet revolution of Nostr.
Imagine opening Instagram through Twitter and finding the same profile, the same followers, the same posts.
That’s Nostr.
A simple protocol that quietly returns something we lost without noticing:
ownership of our online identity.
Platforms become tools. The network returns to the people.
We’re not choosing a new social network.
We’re choosing not to belong to just one anymore.
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"content": "You don’t understand Nostr the moment you arrive.\n\nAt first it feels confusing.\nToo many clients. Too many names.\n\nAmethyst. Yakihonne. Primal. Damus. Jumble. Nostur.\n\nThey’re all good in their own way.\nBut only after trying several do you begin to see what’s really happening.\n\nAnd then it clicks.\n\nNostr isn’t a social network.\nIt’s what comes after social networks.\n\nHere you don’t choose a platform.\nYou choose the client you prefer.\n\nYou don’t follow an algorithm.\nYou follow people.\n\nYou don’t have an account owned by a company.\nYou have a key.\nAnd that key is your identity everywhere.\n\nIf an app shuts down, you’re still there.\nIf a relay disappears, your content flows somewhere else.\nIf you dislike an interface, you simply change the door — not the house.\n\nRecently I tried many clients.\n\nAmethyst. Yakihonne. Primal. Damus. Jumble. Nostur.\n\nAll solid. All interesting.\n\nBut the first one that really made everything feel right for me was #Wisp (thanks nostr:nprofile1qqsw9n8heusyq0el9f99tveg7r0rhcu9tznatuekxt764m78ymqu36csxjejf ). \n\nAnd that’s the quiet revolution of Nostr.\n\nImagine opening Instagram through Twitter\nand finding the same profile, the same followers, the same posts.\n\nThat’s Nostr.\n\nA simple protocol that quietly returns something we lost without noticing:\n\nownership of our online identity.\n\nPlatforms become tools.\nThe network returns to the people.\n\nWe’re not choosing a new social network.\n\nWe’re choosing not to belong to just one anymore.",
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