Event JSON
{
"id": "ec50e7fc61f68d3b3f84ba0c8cb97a94419ed0548910fc3c0524ad19167778dc",
"pubkey": "d69c36dac8dfe9d2f0262fd086e99ff0a1b7bb100bb04e5773bcd766c668e504",
"created_at": 1699118303,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"p",
"bb1a99d279f09968444b4e5c37bd8d93236666b36b6ebac4274cb21c1c73d13b",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"p",
"1259066ea08311bb278605654b33524b435bcd0989a685368377e8c81e3ad3ee",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"e",
"bac3697dedf84bfdeb1ad6b249dbdd3a0990f5e4edd1646a6a541a60a1aee80a",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub",
"reply"
],
[
"proxy",
"https://mindly.social/users/geoffduncan/statuses/111353417144036968",
"activitypub"
]
],
"content": "nostr:npub1hvdfn5ne7zvks3ztfewr00vdjv3kve4nddht43p8fjepc8rn6yasz69sq9 \nI doubt it’s a single packet but there’s no real way to know without doing detailed traffic analysis (which is getting beyond even my willingness to deep-dive lately). I’ve seen things in the past that created race conditions in routers (we used them as attacks), but that’s usually a “bake until fail or restart” scenario, not intermittent failure.",
"sig": "78e90ca449d10d248c666d70a054b784fc68eeffbe60cc543861dd57e8631ea4de576175ecad0d28a099e8e9043e058520db2c9c2c5034f535a31c03dd11ad80"
}