Generally speaking, when testing a new app, do you use your ...

9cb3545c36940d9a...
npub1nje4ghpkjsxe5thcd4gdt3agl2usxyxv3xxyx39ul3xgytl5009q87l02j
hex
a672cfd0d4f09b211723d4d942e5ea0a77f418fd594e8003f8a1b62e8de7413cnevent
nevent1qqs2vuk06r20pxepzu3afk2zuh4q5al5rr74jn5qq0u2rd3w3hn5z0qprpmhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuem4d36kwatvw5hx6mm9qgsfev65tsmfgrv69mux65x4c7504wgrzrxgnrzrgj70cnyz9l68hjse775zvKind-1 (TextNote)
Generally speaking, when testing a new app, do you use your nsec to log in. Or are we all crazy who will never use their nsec in another app unless extremely trusted?
Raw JSON
{
"kind": 1,
"id": "a672cfd0d4f09b211723d4d942e5ea0a77f418fd594e8003f8a1b62e8de7413c",
"pubkey": "9cb3545c36940d9a2ef86d50d5c7a8fab90310cc898c4344bcfc4c822ff47bca",
"created_at": 1773193903,
"tags": [
[
"client",
"Damus"
]
],
"content": "Generally speaking, when testing a new app, do you use your nsec to log in. Or are we all crazy who will never use their nsec in another app unless extremely trusted?",
"sig": "dc28d834e879e36b1ce370aa6f018f121a063fef54660796f2218d1ba0f2e49d09f2675f1f6ec620d87496d36e4431173b9004031546d59e2242a7d4d46c611b"
}