Badges are "Alice attests to Bob to match a certain criteria...

Leo Wandersleb

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Kind-1 (TextNote)

2026-04-23T14:02:31Z

↳ 回复 uncleJim21 (npub1g5642xjqyudstx4e9dc702m7suqqvx3djxcdyre38muz7pfwkzzsye9lcr)

Imo the "social" badge use case is kind of played out. What would be more impactful imo is if they started behaving more like LinkedIn credentials: i...

Badges are "Alice attests to Bob to match a certain criteria defined by Alice" and as Nostr is very weak on central authorities, nothing evolved to give worthy badges I know of.

Now if Alice attests to my LinkedIn style c++ skills, how would that be more worthy? Alice would still have to make a name for herself with respect to being good at judging that but it gets to the core of what I want and it's "labels". Just as people might want to know who of their follows is for/against bip110, they might want to know who's good at c++ even if just self-described.

So:

Badges were the most complicated. Somebody defines a badge. The same somebody awards the badge. The awarded has to accept the badge.

Labels are simpler. By labeling your long-form article as for example pro-bip110 you make it discoverable in the bip110 debate.

But that's still more complicated than hashtags. People don't use these neither. But they would also not use #forBIP110 but rather just #BIP110.

As an engineer I want to query all nostriches and put them into buckets but nostriches don't help me by making their minds machine readable. Not without the right incentives.

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  "content": "Badges are \"Alice attests to Bob to match a certain criteria defined by Alice\" and as Nostr is very weak on central authorities, nothing evolved to give worthy badges I know of.\n\nNow if Alice attests to my  LinkedIn style c++ skills, how would that be more worthy? Alice would still have to make a name for herself with respect to being good at judging that but it gets to the core of what I want and it's \"labels\". Just as people might want to know who of their follows is for/against bip110, they might want to know who's good at c++ even if just self-described.\n\nSo:\n\nBadges were the most complicated. Somebody defines a badge. The same somebody awards the badge. The awarded has to accept the badge.\n\nLabels are simpler. By labeling your long-form article as for example pro-bip110 you make it discoverable in the bip110 debate.\n\nBut that's still more complicated than hashtags. People don't use these neither. But they would also not use #forBIP110 but rather just #BIP110.\n\nAs an engineer I want to query all nostriches and put them into buckets but nostriches don't help me by making their minds machine readable. Not without the right incentives.",
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