david on Nostr: In nostr, an id and a naddr differ in the sense that naddr points to data that is ...
In nostr, an id and a naddr differ in the sense that naddr points to data that is replaceable.
But they’re both “addressable” in the sense that you’ve got some data, and you’ve got a string that is an “address” for the data.
Does the word “addressable” necessarily imply that the data is replaceable?
Published at
2024-09-02 01:15:52Event JSON
{
"id": "4502c76e3441c4d64957595f08c1071e157d082ac8bf5742652db7911a3e0a29",
"pubkey": "e5272de914bd301755c439b88e6959a43c9d2664831f093c51e9c799a16a102f",
"created_at": 1725239752,
"kind": 1,
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"content": "In nostr, an id and a naddr differ in the sense that naddr points to data that is replaceable. \n\nBut they’re both “addressable” in the sense that you’ve got some data, and you’ve got a string that is an “address” for the data.\n\nDoes the word “addressable” necessarily imply that the data is replaceable?",
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