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13 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
pablof7z
7622cdc9c0 adds P and p tags 2024-12-28 10:50:31 +00:00
hodlbod
b1a3ca4d0a Merge pull request #1662 from AsaiToshiya/AsaiToshiya-patch-35
rename NIP-44 in readme.
2024-12-27 05:28:32 -08:00
Alex Gleason
ee21566cc4 Merge pull request #1659 from kehiy/nip32
fix broken link.
2024-12-26 16:20:54 -06:00
Alex Gleason
342e5db8c9 Merge pull request #1663 from kehiy/typo
fix typo in nip-94.
2024-12-26 16:20:21 -06:00
Kay
b88f716eef fix typo in nip-94. 2024-12-26 22:13:22 +00:00
Asai Toshiya
e3911cc9e6 rename NIP-44 in readme. 2024-12-27 06:52:15 +09:00
Alex Gleason
2f3b68bb44 Merge pull request #1661 from kehiy/names
fix nip-46 and nip-47 names are changed.
2024-12-26 10:57:56 -06:00
Kay
9acad1c62c fix nip-46 and nip-47 names are changed. 2024-12-26 14:08:13 +00:00
Kay
71ca3f27f3 fix broken link. 2024-12-26 13:14:28 +00:00
Taha
9d4f2b42b4 add some missing words to readme (#1656) 2024-12-22 23:11:24 -03:00
hodlbod
6b4e0f80c2 Merge pull request #1655 from AsaiToshiya/AsaiToshiya-patch-35
nip44: update some nits.
2024-12-20 08:37:55 -08:00
Asai Toshiya
7e150faed4 nip44: update some nits. 2024-12-21 01:34:43 +09:00
Asai Toshiya
97bf5266d7 add kind 10013 to list. 2024-12-20 09:11:37 +09:00
8 changed files with 40 additions and 41 deletions

33
22.md
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@@ -13,6 +13,9 @@ It uses `kind:1111` with plaintext `.content` (no HTML, Markdown, or other forma
Comments MUST point to the root scope using uppercase tag names (e.g. `K`, `E`, `A` or `I`)
and MUST point to the parent item with lowercase ones (e.g. `k`, `e`, `a` or `i`).
Comments MUST point to the authors when one is available (i.e. tagging a nostr event). `P` for the root scope
and `p` for the author of the parent item.
```jsonc
{
kind: 1111,
@@ -23,10 +26,16 @@ and MUST point to the parent item with lowercase ones (e.g. `k`, `e`, `a` or `i`
// the root item kind
["K", "<root kind>"],
// pubkey of the author of the root scope event
["P", "<root-pubkey>", "relay-url-hint"],
// parent item: event addresses, event ids, or i-tags.
["<a, e, i>", "<address, id or i-value>", "<relay or web page hint>", "<parent event's pubkey, if an e tag>"],
// parent item kind
["k", "<parent comment kind>"]
["k", "<parent comment kind>"],
// parent item pubkey
["p", "<parent-pubkey>", "relay-url-hint"]
]
// other fields
}
@@ -46,11 +55,6 @@ Their uppercase versions use the same type of values but relate to the root item
```
`p` tags SHOULD be used when mentioning pubkeys in the `.content` with [NIP-21](21.md).
If the parent item is an event, a `p` tag set to the parent event's author SHOULD be added.
```json
["p", "<pubkey>", "<relay-url>"]
```
## Examples
@@ -65,13 +69,17 @@ A comment on a blog post looks like this:
["A", "30023:3c9849383bdea883b0bd16fece1ed36d37e37cdde3ce43b17ea4e9192ec11289:f9347ca7", "wss://example.relay"],
// the root kind
["K", "30023"],
// author of root event
["P", "3c9849383bdea883b0bd16fece1ed36d37e37cdde3ce43b17ea4e9192ec11289", "wss://example.relay"]
// the parent event address (same as root for top-level comments)
["a", "30023:3c9849383bdea883b0bd16fece1ed36d37e37cdde3ce43b17ea4e9192ec11289:f9347ca7", "wss://example.relay"],
// when the parent event is replaceable or addressable, also include an `e` tag referencing its id
["e", "5b4fc7fed15672fefe65d2426f67197b71ccc82aa0cc8a9e94f683eb78e07651", "wss://example.relay"],
// the parent event kind
["k", "30023"]
["k", "30023"],
// author of the parent event
["p", "3c9849383bdea883b0bd16fece1ed36d37e37cdde3ce43b17ea4e9192ec11289", "wss://example.relay"]
]
// other fields
}
@@ -88,11 +96,14 @@ A comment on a [NIP-94](94.md) file looks like this:
["E", "768ac8720cdeb59227cf95e98b66560ef03d8bc9a90d721779e76e68fb42f5e6", "wss://example.relay", "3721e07b079525289877c366ccab47112bdff3d1b44758ca333feb2dbbbbe5bb"],
// the root kind
["K", "1063"],
// author of the root event
["P", "3721e07b079525289877c366ccab47112bdff3d1b44758ca333feb2dbbbbe5bb"],
// the parent event id (same as root for top-level comments)
["e", "768ac8720cdeb59227cf95e98b66560ef03d8bc9a90d721779e76e68fb42f5e6", "wss://example.relay", "3721e07b079525289877c366ccab47112bdff3d1b44758ca333feb2dbbbbe5bb"],
// the parent kind
["k", "1063"]
["k", "1063"],
["p", "3721e07b079525289877c366ccab47112bdff3d1b44758ca333feb2dbbbbe5bb"]
]
// other fields
}
@@ -109,11 +120,13 @@ A reply to a comment looks like this:
["E", "768ac8720cdeb59227cf95e98b66560ef03d8bc9a90d721779e76e68fb42f5e6", "wss://example.relay", "fd913cd6fa9edb8405750cd02a8bbe16e158b8676c0e69fdc27436cc4a54cc9a"],
// the root kind
["K", "1063"],
["P", "fd913cd6fa9edb8405750cd02a8bbe16e158b8676c0e69fdc27436cc4a54cc9a"],
// the parent event
["e", "5c83da77af1dec6d7289834998ad7aafbd9e2191396d75ec3cc27f5a77226f36", "wss://example.relay", "93ef2ebaaf9554661f33e79949007900bbc535d239a4c801c33a4d67d3e7f546"],
// the parent kind
["k", "1111"]
["k", "1111"],
["p", "93ef2ebaaf9554661f33e79949007900bbc535d239a4c801c33a4d67d3e7f546"]
]
// other fields
}
@@ -178,7 +191,9 @@ A reply to a podcast comment:
["e", "80c48d992a38f9c445b943a9c9f1010b396676013443765750431a9004bdac05", "wss://example.relay", "252f10c83610ebca1a059c0bae8255eba2f95be4d1d7bcfa89d7248a82d9f111"],
// the parent comment kind
["k", "1111"]
["p", "252f10c83610ebca1a059c0bae8255eba2f95be4d1d7bcfa89d7248a82d9f111"]
]
// other fields
}
```

4
23.md
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@@ -6,9 +6,7 @@ Long-form Content
`draft` `optional`
This NIP defines `kind:30023` (an _addressable event_) for long-form text content, generally referred to as "articles" or "blog posts".
Deprecated: `kind:30024` was used for long-form drafts (self-encrypted nip04, same format as `kind:30023`). The preferred way of doing long-form drafts is to use [NIP-37](37.md) instead.
This NIP defines `kind:30023` (an _addressable event_) for long-form text content, generally referred to as "articles" or "blog posts". `kind:30024` has the same structure as `kind:30023` and is used to save long form drafts.
"Social" clients that deal primarily with `kind:1` notes should not be expected to implement this NIP.

4
32.md
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@@ -157,7 +157,7 @@ considered open for public use, and not proprietary. In other words, if there is
namespace that fits your use case, use it even if it points to someone else's domain name.
Vocabularies MAY choose to fully qualify all labels within a namespace (for example,
`["l", "com.example.vocabulary:my-label"]`. This may be preferred when defining more
`["l", "com.example.vocabulary:my-label"]`). This may be preferred when defining more
formal vocabularies that should not be confused with another namespace when querying
without an `L` tag. For these vocabularies, all labels SHOULD include the namespace
(rather than mixing qualified and unqualified labels).
@@ -173,4 +173,4 @@ Appendix: Known Ontologies
Below is a non-exhaustive list of ontologies currently in widespread use.
- [social.ontolo.categories](https://ontolo.social/)
- [social ontology categories](https://github.com/CLARIAH/awesome-humanities-ontologies)

13
37.md
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@@ -30,19 +30,6 @@ A blanked `.content` means this draft has been deleted by a client but relays st
Tags `e` and `a` identify one or more anchor events, such as parent events on replies.
## Checkpoints
`kind:1234` defines checkpoints that belong to a parent `kind:31234` event. These can serve to provide a revision history of a parent event.
```js
{
"kind": 1234,
"tags": [
["a", "31234:<pubkey>:<identifier>"]
],
"content": nip44Encrypt(JSON.stringify(draft_event)),
}
```
## Relay List for Private Content
Kind `10013` indicates the user's preferred relays to store private events like Drafts. The event MUST include a list of `relay` URLs in private tags. Private tags are JSON Stringified, NIP-44-encrypted to the signer's keys and placed inside the .content of the event.

12
44.md
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@@ -8,11 +8,11 @@ Encrypted Payloads (Versioned)
The NIP introduces a new data format for keypair-based encryption. This NIP is versioned
to allow multiple algorithm choices to exist simultaneously. This format may be used for
many things, but MUST be used in the context of a signed event as described in NIP 01.
many things, but MUST be used in the context of a signed event as described in NIP-01.
*Note*: this format DOES NOT define any `kind`s related to a new direct messaging standard,
only the encryption required to define one. It SHOULD NOT be used as a drop-in replacement
for NIP 04 payloads.
for NIP-04 payloads.
## Versions
@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ On its own, messages sent using this scheme have a number of important shortcomi
- No post-compromise security: when a key is compromised, it is possible to decrypt all future conversations
- No post-quantum security: a powerful quantum computer would be able to decrypt the messages
- IP address leak: user IP may be seen by relays and all intermediaries between user and relay
- Date leak: `created_at` is public, since it is a part of NIP 01 event
- Date leak: `created_at` is public, since it is a part of NIP-01 event
- Limited message size leak: padding only partially obscures true message length
- No attachments: they are not supported
@@ -86,7 +86,7 @@ NIP-44 version 2 has the following design characteristics:
- Content must be encoded from UTF-8 into byte array
- Validate plaintext length. Minimum is 1 byte, maximum is 65535 bytes
- Padding format is: `[plaintext_length: u16][plaintext][zero_bytes]`
- Padding algorithm is related to powers-of-two, with min padded msg size of 32bytes
- Padding algorithm is related to powers-of-two, with min padded msg size of 32 bytes
- Plaintext length is encoded in big-endian as first 2 bytes of the padded blob
5. Encrypt padded content
- Use ChaCha20, with key and nonce from step 3
@@ -148,8 +148,8 @@ validation rules, refer to BIP-340.
- `x[i:j]`, where `x` is a byte array and `i, j <= 0` returns a `(j - i)`-byte array with a copy of the
`i`-th byte (inclusive) to the `j`-th byte (exclusive) of `x`.
- Constants `c`:
- `min_plaintext_size` is 1. 1bytes msg is padded to 32bytes.
- `max_plaintext_size` is 65535 (64kB - 1). It is padded to 65536bytes.
- `min_plaintext_size` is 1. 1 byte msg is padded to 32 bytes.
- `max_plaintext_size` is 65535 (64kB - 1). It is padded to 65536 bytes.
- Functions
- `base64_encode(string)` and `base64_decode(bytes)` are Base64 ([RFC 4648](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc4648), with padding)
- `concat` refers to byte array concatenation

1
51.md
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@@ -30,7 +30,6 @@ For example, _mute list_ can contain the public keys of spammers and bad actors
| Blocked relays | 10006 | relays clients should never connect to | `"relay"` (relay URLs) |
| Search relays | 10007 | relays clients should use when performing search queries | `"relay"` (relay URLs) |
| Simple groups | 10009 | [NIP-29](29.md) groups the user is in | `"group"` ([NIP-29](29.md) group id + relay URL + optional group name), `"r"` for each relay in use |
| Draft relays | 10013 | (nip44-encrypted) [NIP-37](37.md) draft relays | `"relay"` (relay URL) |
| Interests | 10015 | topics a user may be interested in and pointers | `"t"` (hashtags) and `"a"` (kind:30015 interest set) |
| Emojis | 10030 | user preferred emojis and pointers to emoji sets | `"emoji"` (see [NIP-30](30.md)) and `"a"` (kind:30030 emoji set) |
| DM relays | 10050 | Where to receive [NIP-17](17.md) direct messages | `"relay"` (see [NIP-17](17.md)) |

2
94.md
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@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ The purpose of this NIP is to allow an organization and classification of shared
## Event format
This NIP specifies the use of the `1063` event type, having in `content` a description of the file content, and a list of tags described below:
This NIP specifies the use of the `1063` event kind, having in `content` a description of the file content, and a list of tags described below:
* `url` the url to download the file
* `m` a string indicating the data type of the file. The [MIME types](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Basics_of_HTTP/MIME_types/Common_types) format must be used, and they should be lowercase.

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@@ -59,10 +59,10 @@ They exist to document what may be implemented by [Nostr](https://github.com/nos
- [NIP-39: External Identities in Profiles](39.md)
- [NIP-40: Expiration Timestamp](40.md)
- [NIP-42: Authentication of clients to relays](42.md)
- [NIP-44: Versioned Encryption](44.md)
- [NIP-44: Encrypted Payloads (Versioned)](44.md)
- [NIP-45: Counting results](45.md)
- [NIP-46: Nostr Connect](46.md)
- [NIP-47: Wallet Connect](47.md)
- [NIP-46: Nostr Remote Signing](46.md)
- [NIP-47: Nostr Wallet Connect](47.md)
- [NIP-48: Proxy Tags](48.md)
- [NIP-49: Private Key Encryption](49.md)
- [NIP-50: Search Capability](50.md)
@@ -130,7 +130,6 @@ They exist to document what may be implemented by [Nostr](https://github.com/nos
| `818` | Merge Requests | [54](54.md) |
| `1021` | Bid | [15](15.md) |
| `1022` | Bid confirmation | [15](15.md) |
| `1234` | Draft Checkpoint | [37](37.md) |
| `1040` | OpenTimestamps | [03](03.md) |
| `1059` | Gift Wrap | [59](59.md) |
| `1063` | File Metadata | [94](94.md) |
@@ -171,6 +170,7 @@ They exist to document what may be implemented by [Nostr](https://github.com/nos
| `10006` | Blocked relays list | [51](51.md) |
| `10007` | Search relays list | [51](51.md) |
| `10009` | User groups | [51](51.md), [29](29.md) |
| `10013` | Draft relays | [37](37.md) |
| `10015` | Interests list | [51](51.md) |
| `10019` | Nutzap Mint Recommendation | [61](61.md) |
| `10030` | User emoji list | [51](51.md) |
@@ -344,9 +344,9 @@ Please update these lists when proposing new NIPs.
## Is this repository a centralizing factor?
To promote interoperability, we standards that everybody can follow, and we need them to define a **single way of doing each thing** without ever hurting **backwards-compatibility**, and for that purpose there is no way around getting everybody to agree on the same thing and keep a centralized index of these standards. However the fact that such index exists doesn't hurt the decentralization of Nostr. _At any point the central index can be challenged if it is failing to fulfill the needs of the protocol_ and it can migrate to other places and be maintained by other people.
To promote interoperability, we need standards that everybody can follow, and we need them to define a **single way of doing each thing** without ever hurting **backwards-compatibility**, and for that purpose there is no way around getting everybody to agree on the same thing and keep a centralized index of these standards. However the fact that such an index exists doesn't hurt the decentralization of Nostr. _At any point the central index can be challenged if it is failing to fulfill the needs of the protocol_ and it can migrate to other places and be maintained by other people.
It can even fork into multiple and then some clients would go one way, others would go another way, and some clients would adhere to both competing standards. This would hurt the simplicity, openness and interoperability of Nostr a little, but everything would still work in the short term.
It can even fork into multiple versions, and then some clients would go one way, others would go another way, and some clients would adhere to both competing standards. This would hurt the simplicity, openness and interoperability of Nostr a little, but everything would still work in the short term.
There is a list of notable Nostr software developers who have commit access to this repository, but that exists mostly for practical reasons, as by the nature of the thing we're dealing with the repository owner can revoke membership and rewrite history as they want -- and if these actions are unjustified or perceived as bad or evil the community must react.