sondreb on Nostr: Does it make sense to allow users to use the "d" identifiers as friendly URLs to ...
Does it make sense to allow users to use the "d" identifiers as friendly URLs to articles? So you could have "a/pubkey/my-favorite-food".
Then if I host my own article/blog site, I could configure the pubkey as some default value and posts could be available at /my-favorite-food.
I'll do that, derive the identifier from title and allow user to edit it.
Published at
2023-02-20 20:55:53Event JSON
{
"id": "6ae7c35b81ad758b77e88f38875003256eeb6e26d26d5ff8a928660056d2dbfc",
"pubkey": "17e2889fba01021d048a13fd0ba108ad31c38326295460c21e69c43fa8fbe515",
"created_at": 1676926553,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"p",
"de7ecd1e2976a6adb2ffa5f4db81a7d812c8bb6698aa00dcf1e76adb55efd645"
],
[
"e",
"76033ed4c553e02d8567575933ebeae6ab4790cd657aca9e3dbe29679380656e"
]
],
"content": "Does it make sense to allow users to use the \"d\" identifiers as friendly URLs to articles? So you could have \"a/pubkey/my-favorite-food\".\n\nThen if I host my own article/blog site, I could configure the pubkey as some default value and posts could be available at /my-favorite-food.\n\nI'll do that, derive the identifier from title and allow user to edit it.",
"sig": "159500b8c10ce9c1c733d8e88c07e1a42a065457917c489067fe825ac7764ad6ea964cada592aaabe5703af8c5469c2323b2430b5b27af94a905fb53478fb59d"
}