Honestly, I’m a bit confused by the “Nostr is for everyone (...

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Honestly, I’m a bit confused by the “Nostr is for everyone ( normies included) / we welcome normies” narrative sometimes. Because in practice, it doesn’t really feel built for that. And when someone points that out, the response is often “run your own relay” or similar. But most normal users don’t want to run infrastructure, manage relays, or deal with technical setup for basic social use. They just want something that works out of the box. So I’m trying to understand what that narrative actually means in reality. Is Nostr really aiming for mainstream users, or is it mainly a space for developers and more technical users? To me, those two goals feel quite different, and I’m just trying to make sense of the gap between the messaging and the actual user experience.
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"content": "Honestly, I’m a bit confused by the “Nostr is for everyone ( normies included) / we welcome normies” narrative sometimes. Because in practice, it doesn’t really feel built for that. And when someone points that out, the response is often “run your own relay” or similar.\nBut most normal users don’t want to run infrastructure, manage relays, or deal with technical setup for basic social use. They just want something that works out of the box. So I’m trying to understand what that narrative actually means in reality. Is Nostr really aiming for mainstream users, or is it mainly a space for developers and more technical users? To me, those two goals feel quite different, and I’m just trying to make sense of the gap between the messaging and the actual user experience. ",
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