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74 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
fiatjaf
9b6956ddad nip37: optional kind:1 edits. 2024-10-30 17:56:26 -03:00
fiatjaf_
8e2523e331 Merge pull request #1496 from nostr-protocol/nip29-hodlbod
nip29: support for unmanaged groups, top-level relay-local groups and invite codes
2024-10-29 12:58:12 -03:00
fiatjaf
f1e8d2c4f7 nip46: remove words, introduce distinction between bunker key and user key. 2024-10-29 11:33:22 -03:00
hodlbod
3cebb2afe0 Merge pull request #1550 from ilcompratoreconsapevole/master
Changed 'id value' at row 162
2024-10-28 09:06:19 -07:00
ilcompratoreconsapevole
f21aa981d4 Changed 'id value' at row 162 2024-10-27 22:56:40 +01:00
Asai Toshiya
dde8c81a87 remove duplicate NIP-64 from list. 2024-10-26 23:34:37 +09:00
Pablo Fernandez
ba46b23d95 Cashu wallet + Nutzaps (#1369) 2024-10-25 13:54:49 -03:00
Asai Toshiya
e3afd7ac5b update related to NIP-71. 2024-10-23 13:34:49 -03:00
Vitor Pamplona
bef7fc1cf4 Merge pull request #1533 from greenart7c3/nip_55_result
[NIP-55] - Change return field from signature to result
2024-10-23 09:05:17 -04:00
fiatjaf
d4d040ee71 fix typo. 2024-10-22 09:55:42 -03:00
fiatjaf
e3cf02840d rename "claim"=>"code", get rid of kind 9006 (just use 9000), add a paragraph explaining moderation. 2024-10-21 13:47:02 -03:00
hodlbod
07de7ea7e5 Merge pull request #1524 from AsaiToshiya/AsaiToshiya-patch-27
README: add NIP-73 `k` tag
2024-10-18 14:20:59 -07:00
Asai Toshiya
743e925ca5 Merge branch 'master' into AsaiToshiya-patch-27 2024-10-18 22:57:17 +09:00
Kieran
1cda2dcc59 Merge pull request #1261 from nostr-protocol/nip71-imeta
NIP-71: `imeta`
2024-10-15 11:16:49 +01:00
Kieran
1e2f19863c Merge branch 'master' into nip71-imeta 2024-10-15 11:15:54 +01:00
greenart7c3
30f39d35d1 Change return field from signature to result 2024-10-11 07:29:54 -03:00
hodlbod
e381b577c9 Merge pull request #1530 from AsaiToshiya/AsaiToshiya-patch-28
BREAKING.md: add NIP-55 change
2024-10-09 08:40:23 -07:00
Asai Toshiya
79cc2ef215 add NIP-55 change. 2024-10-10 00:28:12 +09:00
Asai Toshiya
22c11cb243 update q tag params. 2024-10-08 21:01:53 +09:00
Alex Gleason
38af1efe77 Merge pull request #1525 from coracle-social/clarify-quote-reposts
Clarify quote reposts
2024-10-07 15:47:54 -05:00
hodlbod
23ef4aa05b Merge pull request #1527 from AsaiToshiya/remove-nip12-mention
NIP-23, NIP-99: remove NIP-12 mention
2024-10-07 09:58:12 -07:00
Asai Toshiya
10c112defe NIP-23, NIP-99: remove NIP-12 mention 2024-10-08 01:40:41 +09:00
Jon Staab
4769b1658a Refer to nip 21 instead of 19 2024-10-07 08:56:52 -07:00
Vic
db13d12eb6 Add Corny Chat Slide Set and Link Set kinds (#1152) 2024-10-07 08:03:20 -03:00
DASHU
7bb8997be5 fix some info of nip55 to be same as other nips 2024-10-07 07:57:03 -03:00
Jon Staab
7df7deebf5 Move generic reposts back to bottom for a simpler diff 2024-10-03 09:39:03 -07:00
Jon Staab
2053aee0c2 Remove addresses and tags from quote reposts 2024-10-03 09:35:09 -07:00
hodlbod
f5a6fb258f Update 18.md
Co-authored-by: Asai Toshiya <to.asai.60@gmail.com>
2024-10-03 09:31:17 -07:00
Jon Staab
78b6615c21 recommend k tag for quotes 2024-10-02 14:50:10 -07:00
Jon Staab
02e934acb7 Clarify quote reposts 2024-10-02 13:22:52 -07:00
Asai Toshiya
7f67ce53fb Format tags table 2024-10-02 23:19:35 +09:00
Asai Toshiya
344b0b9a72 README: add NIP-73 link to k tag 2024-10-02 23:15:20 +09:00
hodlbod
e830a73cbd Merge pull request #1523 from coracle-social/clarify-filters
Clarify tag filters
2024-09-30 09:47:10 -07:00
Jon Staab
ce2234e0ba Clarify tag filters 2024-09-30 09:18:13 -07:00
fiatjaf
a736e629be complete renaming to "addressable" events.
as noticed by @bezysoftware at https://github.com/nostr-protocol/nips/pull/1437#issuecomment-2380626514.

I don't know how so many of these instances were left from the original PR at following ca3c52e3e7.
2024-09-28 12:29:03 -03:00
hodlbod
4438b892d8 Merge pull request #1508 from MerryOscar/expand-external-content-ids
NIP-73 - Expand External Content IDs
2024-09-25 15:15:46 -07:00
Lux
4e73e94d41 fix typo on nip96 (#1511)
Fixing typo
2024-09-22 06:47:39 -03:00
fiatjaf
d82f68aa2e update link to blossom on README. 2024-09-21 11:52:09 -03:00
dluvian
ea36ec9ed7 Add subject and t tags to git issues (#1446)
* Add subject and and l tags to git issues

* Replace `l` with `t` tags

* Add nip34 to tag table

* List nip34 under subject instead of summary
2024-09-20 17:08:47 -03:00
Oscar Merry
79786bb7bb Expand External Content IDs 2024-09-20 16:21:15 +01:00
fiatjaf
765daceaa1 remove invites, simplify group metadata edits, rework fine-grained "permissions" into unspecified "roles". 2024-09-18 22:27:03 -03:00
Asai Toshiya
ff39a11611 Merge pull request #1469 from AsaiToshiya/AsaiToshiya-patch-27
NIP-65: add link to outbox model article
2024-09-19 08:33:11 +09:00
fiatjaf
6cd598d02c remove NIP-88 polls temporarily.
due to some crazy fight happening at https://github.com/nostr-protocol/nips/pull/1501
I'm removing this until people can become more reasonable.
2024-09-17 18:56:57 -03:00
Alex Gleason
2baf7c87ef Merge pull request #1501 from alexgleason/polls-replaceable
NIP-88: make poll response a parameterized replaceable event
2024-09-17 16:17:00 -05:00
Alex Gleason
3d8bf682b6 NIP-88: make poll response a parameterized replaceable event 2024-09-17 09:22:40 -05:00
fiatjaf
d534bade71 renumber polls NIP to 88.
this one: https://github.com/nostr-protocol/nips/pull/1346
2024-09-17 11:04:01 -03:00
fiatjaf_
4bf0c01144 Merge pull request #1346 from abhay-raizada/nostr-polls
NIP-118, Polls on Nostr
2024-09-17 11:01:18 -03:00
fiatjaf
efcc86950d remove this annoying file. 2024-09-13 16:17:35 -03:00
fiatjaf
e61651ac06 nip29: make @staab happier. 2024-09-13 08:39:47 -03:00
Zig Blathazar
37a02e817b custom emojis in reactions (#1492) 2024-09-12 10:15:47 -03:00
hodlbod
8a427ea6d6 Merge pull request #1488 from kehiy/md
make *.md linguist detectable.
2024-09-11 06:24:31 -07:00
kehiy
d8ab9849b3 make *.md linguist detectable. 2024-09-11 13:17:16 +03:30
hodlbod
97a42449a8 Merge pull request #1487 from ZigBalthazar/patch-1
Update 10.md
2024-09-10 14:19:48 -07:00
Zig Blathazar
c343175a32 Update 10.md 2024-09-10 23:37:36 +03:30
Jon Staab
e7eb776288 Revert example code update 2024-09-09 17:41:57 -03:00
Asai Toshiya
7edd3d23a9 README: update kinds table 2024-09-10 00:32:25 +09:00
hodlbod
c02b161d9e Merge pull request #1477 from kehiy/jsonc
format(all): JSON formatting
2024-09-03 13:56:56 -07:00
K
c8dc1eadff Update 96.md 2024-09-03 23:47:11 +03:30
kehiy
e6552476aa format(all): json formatting 2024-09-03 20:41:31 +03:30
fiatjaf
378dfaa5db nip54: remove markdown leftovers. 2024-09-03 14:07:46 -03:00
Vitor Pamplona
a928d11fb5 Merge pull request #1466 from paulmillr/patch-2
nip44: clarify ecdh hashing
2024-09-03 08:37:21 -04:00
kehiy
b4a2561df7 style: fix header styles in same format 2024-09-02 22:51:48 -03:00
Silberengel
14ec14dac9 Missing events added to README, including NKBIP-01 and NKBIP-02 (#1464)
* Missing events added to README, including NKBIP-01 and NKBIP-02

* Just format

* kind conflict resolved, 2nd blossom kind added

* Revert "kind conflict resolved, 2nd blossom kind added"

This reverts commit 5a8ecc0c27.

* formatting changes merged, kind conflict resolved, 2nd blossom kind added

* relay reviews

---------

Co-authored-by: Asai Toshiya <to.asai.60@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: fiatjaf_ <fiatjaf@gmail.com>
2024-09-02 22:51:07 -03:00
Asai Toshiya
d9eb17ce86 NIP-65: add links to outbox model articles 2024-09-03 01:16:36 +09:00
Paul Miller
be17e5dcd9 Clarify function name in libsecp256k1 2024-09-01 16:13:12 +02:00
Paul Miller
1002104ece nip44: clarify ecdh hashing 2024-09-01 00:44:30 +02:00
hodlbod
24e97c2539 Merge pull request #1333 from coracle-social/clarify-nip01
Clarify what happens when a duplicate subscription is sent, remove CLOSED on duplicate subscription
2024-08-31 06:45:41 -07:00
hodlbod
8184749f5b Merge pull request #1455 from dtonon/nip05-note
NIP-05: add identification vs verification note
2024-08-29 08:30:02 -07:00
dtonon
da34c57e99 NIP-05: add identification vs verification note 2024-08-29 16:37:02 +02:00
Abhay Raizada
c258875395 Remove settings, fine tuning 2024-07-16 23:03:28 +05:30
abhay-raizada
21587e2367 Finalize Draft 2024-07-05 08:28:13 +05:30
Jon Staab
f6b08429a2 Clarify what happens when a duplicate subscription is sent, remove CLOSED on duplicate subscription 2024-06-27 17:00:16 -07:00
abhay-raizada
70f1be5866 Polls On Nostr 2024-06-25 14:28:02 +05:30
kieran
53afaaece6 nip71 imeta 2024-05-27 12:18:27 +01:00
53 changed files with 1155 additions and 533 deletions

9
01.md
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@@ -77,11 +77,11 @@ This NIP defines 3 standard tags that can be used across all event kinds with th
- The `e` tag, used to refer to an event: `["e", <32-bytes lowercase hex of the id of another event>, <recommended relay URL, optional>]`
- The `p` tag, used to refer to another user: `["p", <32-bytes lowercase hex of a pubkey>, <recommended relay URL, optional>]`
- The `a` tag, used to refer to a (maybe parameterized) replaceable event
- The `a` tag, used to refer to an addressable or replaceable event
- for an addressable event: `["a", <kind integer>:<32-bytes lowercase hex of a pubkey>:<d tag value>, <recommended relay URL, optional>]`
- for a normal replaceable event: `["a", <kind integer>:<32-bytes lowercase hex of a pubkey>:, <recommended relay URL, optional>]`
As a convention, all single-letter (only english alphabet letters: a-z, A-Z) key tags are expected to be indexed by relays, such that it is possible, for example, to query or subscribe to events that reference the event `"5c83da77af1dec6d7289834998ad7aafbd9e2191396d75ec3cc27f5a77226f36"` by using the `{"#e": ["5c83da77af1dec6d7289834998ad7aafbd9e2191396d75ec3cc27f5a77226f36"]}` filter.
As a convention, all single-letter (only english alphabet letters: a-z, A-Z) key tags are expected to be indexed by relays, such that it is possible, for example, to query or subscribe to events that reference the event `"5c83da77af1dec6d7289834998ad7aafbd9e2191396d75ec3cc27f5a77226f36"` by using the `{"#e": ["5c83da77af1dec6d7289834998ad7aafbd9e2191396d75ec3cc27f5a77226f36"]}` filter. Only the first value in any given tag is indexed.
### Kinds
@@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ And also a convention for kind ranges that allow for easier experimentation and
- for kind `n` such that `1000 <= n < 10000 || 4 <= n < 45 || n == 1 || n == 2`, events are **regular**, which means they're all expected to be stored by relays.
- for kind `n` such that `10000 <= n < 20000 || n == 0 || n == 3`, events are **replaceable**, which means that, for each combination of `pubkey` and `kind`, only the latest event MUST be stored by relays, older versions MAY be discarded.
- for kind `n` such that `20000 <= n < 30000`, events are **ephemeral**, which means they are not expected to be stored by relays.
- for kind `n` such that `30000 <= n < 40000`, events are **parameterized replaceable**, which means that, for each combination of `pubkey`, `kind` and the `d` tag's first value, only the latest event MUST be stored by relays, older versions MAY be discarded.
- for kind `n` such that `30000 <= n < 40000`, events are **addressable** by their `kind`, `pubkey` and `d` tag value -- which means that, for each combination of `kind`, `pubkey` and the `d` tag value, only the latest event MUST be stored by relays, older versions MAY be discarded.
In case of replaceable events with the same timestamp, the event with the lowest id (first in lexical order) should be retained, and the other discarded.
@@ -131,7 +131,7 @@ Clients can send 3 types of messages, which must be JSON arrays, according to th
}
```
Upon receiving a `REQ` message, the relay SHOULD query its internal database and return events that match the filter, then store that filter and send again all future events it receives to that same websocket until the websocket is closed. The `CLOSE` event is received with the same `<subscription_id>` or a new `REQ` is sent using the same `<subscription_id>`, in which case relay MUST overwrite the previous subscription.
Upon receiving a `REQ` message, the relay SHOULD return events that match the filter. Any new events it receives SHOULD be sent to that same websocket until the connection is closed, a `CLOSE` event is received with the same `<subscription_id>`, or a new `REQ` is sent using the same `<subscription_id>` (in which case a new subscription is created, replacing the old one).
Filter attributes containing lists (`ids`, `authors`, `kinds` and tag filters like `#e`) are JSON arrays with one or more values. At least one of the arrays' values must match the relevant field in an event for the condition to be considered a match. For scalar event attributes such as `authors` and `kind`, the attribute from the event must be contained in the filter list. In the case of tag attributes such as `#e`, for which an event may have multiple values, the event and filter condition values must have at least one item in common.
@@ -169,7 +169,6 @@ This NIP defines no rules for how `NOTICE` messages should be sent or treated.
* `["OK", "b1a649ebe8...", false, "pow: difficulty 26 is less than 30"]`
* `["OK", "b1a649ebe8...", false, "error: could not connect to the database"]`
- `CLOSED` messages MUST be sent in response to a `REQ` when the relay refuses to fulfill it. It can also be sent when a relay decides to kill a subscription on its side before a client has disconnected or sent a `CLOSE`. This message uses the same pattern of `OK` messages with the machine-readable prefix and human-readable message. Some examples:
* `["CLOSED", "sub1", "duplicate: sub1 already opened"]`
* `["CLOSED", "sub1", "unsupported: filter contains unknown elements"]`
* `["CLOSED", "sub1", "error: could not connect to the database"]`
* `["CLOSED", "sub1", "error: shutting down idle subscription"]`

4
02.md
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@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ The `.content` is not used.
For example:
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 3,
"tags": [
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ For example:
["p", "612ae..e610f", "ws://carolrelay.com/ws", "carol"]
],
"content": "",
...other fields
// other fields...
}
```

17
05.md
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@@ -16,12 +16,12 @@ The result should be a JSON document object with a key `"names"` that should the
If a client sees an event like this:
```json
```jsonc
{
"pubkey": "b0635d6a9851d3aed0cd6c495b282167acf761729078d975fc341b22650b07b9",
"kind": 0,
"content": "{\"name\": \"bob\", \"nip05\": \"bob@example.com\"}"
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -58,6 +58,15 @@ A client may implement support for finding users' public keys from _internet ide
## Notes
### Identification, not verification
The NIP-05 is not intended to _verify_ a user, but only to _identify_ them, for the purpose of facilitating the exchange of a contact or their search.
Exceptions are people who own (e.g., a company) or are connected (e.g., a project) to a well-known domain, who can exploit NIP-05 as an attestation of their relationship with it, and thus to the organization behind it, thereby gaining an element of trust.
### User discovery implementation suggestion
A client can use this to allow users to search other profiles. If a client has a search box or something like that, a user may be able to type "bob@example.com" there and the client would recognize that and do the proper queries to obtain a pubkey and suggest that to the user.
### Clients must always follow public keys, not NIP-05 addresses
For example, if after finding that `bob@bob.com` has the public key `abc...def`, the user clicks a button to follow that profile, the client must keep a primary reference to `abc...def`, not `bob@bob.com`. If, for any reason, the address `https://bob.com/.well-known/nostr.json?name=bob` starts returning the public key `1d2...e3f` at any time in the future, the client must not replace `abc...def` in his list of followed profiles for the user (but it should stop displaying "bob@bob.com" for that user, as that will have become an invalid `"nip05"` property).
@@ -66,10 +75,6 @@ For example, if after finding that `bob@bob.com` has the public key `abc...def`,
Keys must be returned in hex format. Keys in NIP-19 `npub` format are only meant to be used for display in client UIs, not in this NIP.
### User Discovery implementation suggestion
A client can also use this to allow users to search other profiles. If a client has a search box or something like that, a user may be able to type "bob@example.com" there and the client would recognize that and do the proper queries to obtain a pubkey and suggest that to the user.
### Showing just the domain as an identifier
Clients may treat the identifier `_@domain` as the "root" identifier, and choose to display it as just the `<domain>`. For example, if Bob owns `bob.com`, he may not want an identifier like `bob@bob.com` as that is redundant. Instead, Bob can use the identifier `_@bob.com` and expect Nostr clients to show and treat that as just `bob.com` for all purposes.

6
09.md
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@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ NIP-09
======
Event Deletion Request
--------------
----------------------
`draft` `optional`
@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ The event's `content` field MAY contain a text note describing the reason for th
For example:
```
```jsonc
{
"kind": 5,
"pubkey": <32-bytes hex-encoded public key of the event creator>,
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ For example:
["k", "30023"]
],
"content": "these posts were published by accident",
...other fields
// other fields...
}
```

6
10.md
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@@ -2,8 +2,8 @@ NIP-10
======
On "e" and "p" tags in Text Events (kind 1).
--------------------------------------------
On "e" and "p" tags in Text Events (kind 1)
-------------------------------------------
`draft` `optional`
@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ They are citing from this event. `root-id` and `reply-id` are as above.
Where:
* `<event-id>` is the id of the event being referenced.
* `<relay-url>` is the URL of a recommended relay associated with the reference. Clients SHOULD add a valid `<relay-URL>` field, but may instead leave it as `""`.
* `<relay-url>` is the URL of a recommended relay associated with the reference. Clients SHOULD add a valid `<relay-url>` field, but may instead leave it as `""`.
* `<marker>` is optional and if present is one of `"reply"`, `"root"`, or `"mention"`.
* `<pubkey>` is optional, SHOULD be the pubkey of the author of the referenced event

32
11.md
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@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ NIP-11
======
Relay Information Document
---------------------------
--------------------------
`draft` `optional`
@@ -66,7 +66,7 @@ These are limitations imposed by the relay on clients. Your client
should expect that requests which exceed these *practical* limitations
are rejected or fail immediately.
```json
```jsonc
{
"limitation": {
"max_message_length": 16384,
@@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ are rejected or fail immediately.
"created_at_lower_limit": 31536000,
"created_at_upper_limit": 3
},
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -146,14 +146,15 @@ Retention times are given in seconds, with `null` indicating infinity.
If zero is provided, this means the event will not be stored at
all, and preferably an error will be provided when those are received.
```json
```jsonc
{
"retention": [
{"kinds": [0, 1, [5, 7], [40, 49]], "time": 3600},
{"kinds": [[40000, 49999]], "time": 100},
{"kinds": [[30000, 39999]], "count": 1000},
{"time": 3600, "count": 10000}
]
],
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -172,7 +173,7 @@ There is no need to specify retention times for _ephemeral events_ since they ar
### Content Limitations
Some relays may be governed by the arbitrary laws of a nation state. This
may limit what content can be stored in cleartext on those relays. All
may limit what content can be stored in clear-text on those relays. All
clients are encouraged to use encryption to work around this limitation.
It is not possible to describe the limitations of each country's laws
@@ -183,13 +184,13 @@ countries' laws might end up being enforced on them, and then
indirectly on their users' content.
Users should be able to avoid relays in countries they don't like,
and/or select relays in more favourable zones. Exposing this
and/or select relays in more favorable zones. Exposing this
flexibility is up to the client software.
```json
```jsonc
{
"relay_countries": [ "CA", "US" ],
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -208,12 +209,12 @@ local community. This would encourage users to follow the global
feed on that relay, in addition to their usual individual follows.
To support this goal, relays MAY specify some of the following values.
```json
```jsonc
{
"language_tags": ["en", "en-419"],
"tags": ["sfw-only", "bitcoin-only", "anime"],
"posting_policy": "https://example.com/posting-policy.html",
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -260,10 +261,10 @@ Relays that require payments may want to expose their fee schedules.
A URL pointing to an image to be used as an icon for the relay. Recommended to be squared in shape.
```json
```jsonc
{
"icon": "https://nostr.build/i/53866b44135a27d624e99c6165cabd76ac8f72797209700acb189fce75021f47.jpg",
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -271,9 +272,11 @@ A URL pointing to an image to be used as an icon for the relay. Recommended to b
As of 2 May 2023 the following command provided these results:
```bash
$ curl -H "Accept: application/nostr+json" https://eden.nostr.land | jq
```
~> curl -H "Accept: application/nostr+json" https://eden.nostr.land | jq
```json
{
"description": "nostr.land family of relays (us-or-01)",
"name": "nostr.land",
@@ -312,3 +315,4 @@ As of 2 May 2023 the following command provided these results:
]
},
}
```

45
13.md
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@@ -48,37 +48,30 @@ Validating
Here is some reference C code for calculating the difficulty (aka number of leading zero bits) in a nostr event id:
```c
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
int zero_bits(unsigned char b)
{
int n = 0;
int countLeadingZeroes(const char *hex) {
int count = 0;
if (b == 0)
return 8;
for (int i = 0; i < strlen(hex); i++) {
int nibble = (int)strtol((char[]){hex[i], '\0'}, NULL, 16);
if (nibble == 0) {
count += 4;
} else {
count += __builtin_clz(nibble) - 28;
break;
}
}
while (b >>= 1)
n++;
return count;
return 7-n;
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
if (argc != 2) {
fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s <hex_string>\n", argv[0]);
return 1;
}
const char *hex_string = argv[1];
int result = countLeadingZeroes(hex_string);
printf("Leading zeroes in hex string %s: %d\n", hex_string, result);
return 0;
/* find the number of leading zero bits in a hash */
int count_leading_zero_bits(unsigned char *hash)
{
int bits, total, i;
for (i = 0, total = 0; i < 32; i++) {
bits = zero_bits(hash[i]);
total += bits;
if (bits != 8)
break;
}
return total;
}
```

19
15.md
View File

@@ -73,10 +73,10 @@ Fields that are not self-explanatory:
**Event Tags**
```json
```jsonc
{
"tags": [["d", <string, id of stall]],
...
// other fields...
}
```
- the `d` tag is required, its value MUST be the same as the stall `id`.
@@ -124,12 +124,12 @@ Fields that are not self-explanatory:
**Event Tags**
```json
```jsonc
"tags": [
["d", <string, id of product],
["t", <string (optional), product category],
["t", <string (optional), product category],
...
// other fields...
],
...
```
@@ -158,7 +158,7 @@ The below JSON goes in content of [NIP-04](04.md).
"type": 0,
"name": <string (optional), ???>,
"address": <string (optional), for physical goods an address should be provided>,
"message": "<string (optional), message for merchant>,
"message": <string (optional), message for merchant>,
"contact": {
"nostr": <32-bytes hex of a pubkey>,
"phone": <string (optional), if the customer wants to be contacted by phone>,
@@ -237,7 +237,7 @@ Create a customized user experience using the `naddr` from [NIP-19](19.md#sharea
**Event Content**
```json
```jsonc
{
"name": <string (optional), market name>,
"about": <string (optional), market description>,
@@ -248,7 +248,7 @@ Create a customized user experience using the `naddr` from [NIP-19](19.md#sharea
"darkMode": <bool, true/false>
},
"merchants": [array of pubkeys (optional)],
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -290,10 +290,11 @@ This event leverages naddr to enable comprehensive customization and sharing of
### Event `1021`: Bid
```json
```jsonc
{
"content": <int, amount of sats>,
"tags": [["e", <event ID of the auction to bid on>]],
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -335,4 +336,4 @@ Customer support is handled over whatever communication method was specified. If
## Additional
Standard data models can be found <a href="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/lnbits/nostrmarket/main/models.py">here</a>
Standard data models can be found [here](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/lnbits/nostrmarket/main/models.py)

10
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View File

@@ -12,18 +12,18 @@ This NIP defines an encrypted direct messaging scheme using [NIP-44](44.md) encr
Kind `14` is a chat message. `p` tags identify one or more receivers of the message.
```js
```jsonc
{
"id": "<usual hash>",
  "pubkey": "<sender-pubkey>",
"created_at": now(),
"created_at": "<current-time>",
  "kind": 14,
  "tags": [
    ["p", "<receiver-1-pubkey>", "<relay-url>"],
    ["p", "<receiver-2-pubkey>", "<relay-url>"],
    ["e", "<kind-14-id>", "<relay-url>", "reply"] // if this is a reply
["subject", "<conversation-title>"],
    ...
    // rest of tags...
  ],
  "content": "<message-in-plain-text>",
}
@@ -86,7 +86,7 @@ Clients CAN offer disappearing messages by setting an `expiration` tag in the gi
Kind `10050` indicates the user's preferred relays to receive DMs. The event MUST include a list of `relay` tags with relay URIs.
```js
```jsonc
{
"kind": 10050,
"tags": [
@@ -94,7 +94,7 @@ Kind `10050` indicates the user's preferred relays to receive DMs. The event MUS
["relay", "wss://myrelay.nostr1.com"],
],
"content": "",
//...other fields
// other fields...
}
```

8
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View File

@@ -25,6 +25,14 @@ quote reposted. The `q` tag ensures quote reposts are not pulled and included
as replies in threads. It also allows you to easily pull and count all of the
quotes for a post.
`q` tags should follow the same conventions as NIP 10 `e` tags, with the exception
of the `mark` argument.
`["q", <event-id>, <relay-url>, <pubkey>]`
Quote reposts MUST include the [NIP-21](21.md) `nevent`, `note`, or `naddr` of the
event in the content.
## Generic Reposts
Since `kind 6` reposts are reserved for `kind 1` contents, we use `kind 16`

4
23.md
View File

@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ The `.content` of these events should be a string text in Markdown syntax. To ma
### Metadata
For the date of the last update the `.created_at` field should be used, for "tags"/"hashtags" (i.e. topics about which the event might be of relevance) the `t` tag should be used, as per NIP-12.
For the date of the last update the `.created_at` field should be used, for "tags"/"hashtags" (i.e. topics about which the event might be of relevance) the `t` tag should be used.
Other metadata fields can be added as tags to the event as necessary. Here we standardize 4 that may be useful, although they remain strictly optional:
@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ Other metadata fields can be added as tags to the event as necessary. Here we st
### Editability
These articles are meant to be editable, so they should make use of the parameterized replaceability feature and include a `d` tag with an identifier for the article. Clients should take care to only publish and read these events from relays that implement that. If they don't do that they should also take care to hide old versions of the same article they may receive.
These articles are meant to be editable, so they should include a `d` tag with an identifier for the article. Clients should take care to only publish and read these events from relays that implement that. If they don't do that they should also take care to hide old versions of the same article they may receive.
### Linking

8
25.md
View File

@@ -57,14 +57,14 @@ Reactions to a website
If the target of the reaction is a website, the reaction MUST be a `kind 17` event and MUST include an `r` tag with the website's URL.
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 17,
"content": "⭐",
"tags": [
["r", "https://example.com/"]
],
...other fields
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -79,14 +79,14 @@ The client may specify a custom emoji ([NIP-30](30.md)) `:shortcode:` in the
reaction content. The client should refer to the emoji tag and render the
content as an emoji if shortcode is specified.
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 7,
"content": ":soapbox:",
"tags": [
["emoji", "soapbox", "https://gleasonator.com/emoji/Gleasonator/soapbox.png"]
],
...other fields
// other fields...
}
```

2
26.md
View File

@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ NIP-26
=======
Delegated Event Signing
-----
-----------------------
`draft` `optional`

26
28.md
View File

@@ -25,10 +25,10 @@ Create a public chat channel.
In the channel creation `content` field, Client SHOULD include basic channel metadata (`name`, `about`, `picture` and `relays` as specified in kind 41).
```json
```jsonc
{
"content": "{\"name\": \"Demo Channel\", \"about\": \"A test channel.\", \"picture\": \"https://placekitten.com/200/200\", \"relays\": [\"wss://nos.lol\", \"wss://nostr.mom\"]}",
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -52,11 +52,11 @@ Clients MAY add additional metadata fields.
Clients SHOULD use [NIP-10](10.md) marked "e" tags to recommend a relay.
```json
```jsonc
{
"content": "{\"name\": \"Updated Demo Channel\", \"about\": \"Updating a test channel.\", \"picture\": \"https://placekitten.com/201/201\", \"relays\": [\"wss://nos.lol\", \"wss://nostr.mom\"]}",
"tags": [["e", <channel_create_event_id>, <relay-url>]],
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -71,26 +71,26 @@ Clients SHOULD append [NIP-10](10.md) "p" tags to replies.
Root message:
```json
```jsonc
{
"content": <string>,
"tags": [["e", <kind_40_event_id>, <relay-url>, "root"]],
...
// other fields...
}
```
Reply to another message:
```json
```jsonc
{
"content": <string>,
"tags": [
["e", <kind_40_event_id>, <relay-url>, "root"],
["e", <kind_42_event_id>, <relay-url>, "reply"],
["p", <pubkey>, <relay-url>],
...
// rest of tags...
],
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -107,11 +107,11 @@ Clients MAY hide event 42s for other users other than the user who sent the even
(For example, if three users 'hide' an event giving a reason that includes the word 'pornography', a Nostr client that is an iOS app may choose to hide that message for all iOS clients.)
```json
```jsonc
{
"content": "{\"reason\": \"Dick pic\"}",
"tags": [["e", <kind_42_event_id>]],
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -125,11 +125,11 @@ Clients SHOULD hide event 42s shown to a given user, if there is an event 44 fro
Clients MAY hide event 42s for users other than the user who sent the event 44.
```json
```jsonc
{
"content": "{\"reason\": \"Posting dick pics\"}",
"tags": [["p", <pubkey>]],
...
// other fields...
}
```

174
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View File

@@ -22,6 +22,12 @@ Relays are supposed to generate the events that describe group metadata and grou
A group may be identified by a string in the format `<host>'<group-id>`. For example, a group with _id_ `abcdef` hosted at the relay `wss://groups.nostr.com` would be identified by the string `groups.nostr.com'abcdef`.
Group identifiers must be strings restricted to the characters `a-z0-9-_`.
When encountering just the `<host>` without the `'<group-id>`, clients can choose to connect to the group with id `_`, which is a special top-level group dedicated to relay-local discussions.
Group identifiers in most cases should be random or pseudo-random, as that mitigates message replay confusiong and ensures they can be migrated or forked to other relays easily without risking conflicting with other groups using the same id in these new relays. This isn't a hard rule, as, for example, in `unmanaged` and/or ephemeral relays groups might not want to migrate ever, so they might not care about this. Notably, the `_` relay-local group isn't expected to be migrated ever.
## The `h` tag
Events sent by users to groups (chat messages, text notes, moderation events etc) must have an `h` tag with the value set to the group _id_.
@@ -36,20 +42,42 @@ This is a hack to prevent messages from being broadcasted to external relays tha
Relays should prevent late publication (messages published now with a timestamp from days or even hours ago) unless they are open to receive a group forked or moved from another relay.
## Group management
Groups can have any number of users with elevated access. These users are identified by role labels which are arbitrarily defined by the relays (see also the description of `kind:39003`). What each role is capable of not defined in this NIP either, it's a relay policy that can vary. Roles can be assigned by other users (as long as they have the capability to add roles) by publishing a `kind:9000` event with that user's pubkey in a `p` tag and the roles afterwards (even if the user is already a group member a `kind:9000` can be issued and the user roles must just be updated).
The roles supported by the group as to having some special privilege assigned to them should be accessible on the event `kind:39003`, but the relay may also accept other role names, arbitrarily defined by clients, and just not do anything with them.
Users with any roles that have any privilege can be considered _admins_ in a broad sense and be returned in the `kind:39001` event for a group.
## Unmanaged groups
Unmanaged groups are impromptu groups that can be used in any public relay unaware of NIP-29 specifics. They piggyback on relays' natural white/blacklists (or lack of) but aside from that are not actively managed and won't have any admins, group state or metadata events.
In `unmanaged` groups, everybody is considered to be a member.
Unmanaged groups can transition to managed groups, in that case the relay master key just has to publish moderation events setting the state of all groups and start enforcing the rules they choose to.
## Event definitions
These are the events expected to be found in NIP-29 groups.
### Normal user-created events
These events generally can be sent by all members of a group and they require the `h` tag to be present so they're attached to a specific group.
- *text root note* (`kind:11`)
This is the basic unit of a "microblog" root text note sent to a group.
```js
```jsonc
"kind": 11,
"content": "hello my friends lovers of pizza",
"tags": [
["h", "<group-id>"],
["previous", "<event-id-first-chars>", "<event-id-first-chars>", ...]
["previous", "<event-id-first-chars>", "<event-id-first-chars>", /*...*/]
]
...
// other fields...
```
- *threaded text reply* (`kind:12`)
@@ -63,14 +91,14 @@ This is the basic unit of a "microblog" reply note sent to a group. It's the sam
This is the basic unit of a _chat message_ sent to a group.
```js
```jsonc
"kind": 9,
"content": "hello my friends lovers of pizza",
"tags": [
["h", "<group-id>"],
["previous", "<event-id-first-chars>", "<event-id-first-chars>", ...]
["previous", "<event-id-first-chars>", "<event-id-first-chars>", /*...*/]
]
...
// other fields...
```
- *chat message threaded reply* (`kind:10`)
@@ -79,25 +107,36 @@ Similar to `kind:12`, this is the basic unit of a chat message sent to a group.
`kind:10` SHOULD use NIP-10 markers, just like `kind:12`.
- other events:
Groups may also accept other events, like long-form articles, calendar, livestream, market announcements and so on. These should be as defined in their respective NIPs, with the addition of the `h` tag.
### User-related group management events
These are events that can be sent by users to manage their situation in a group, they also require the `h` tag.
- *join request* (`kind:9021`)
Any user can send one of these events to the relay in order to be automatically or manually added to the group. If the group is `open` the relay will automatically issue a `kind:9000` in response adding this user. Otherwise group admins may choose to query for these requests and act upon them.
```js
```json
{
"kind": 9021,
"content": "optional reason",
"tags": [
["h", "<group-id>"]
["h", "<group-id>"],
["code", "<optional-invite-code>"]
]
}
```
The optional `code` tag may be used by the relay to preauthorize acceptances in `closed` groups, together with the `kind:9009` `create-invite` moderation event.
- *leave request* (`kind:9022`)
Any user can send one of these events to the relay in order to be automatically removed from the group. The relay will automatically issue a `kind:9001` in response removing this user.
```js
```json
{
"kind": 9022,
"content": "optional reason",
@@ -107,34 +146,41 @@ Any user can send one of these events to the relay in order to be automatically
}
```
### Group state -- or moderation
These are events expected to be sent by the relay master key or by group admins -- and relays should reject them if they don't come from an authorized admin. They also require the `h` tag.
- *moderation events* (`kinds:9000-9020`) (optional)
Clients can send these events to a relay in order to accomplish a moderation action. Relays must check if the pubkey sending the event is capable of performing the given action. The relay may discard the event after taking action or keep it as a moderation log.
Clients can send these events to a relay in order to accomplish a moderation action. Relays must check if the pubkey sending the event is capable of performing the given action based on its role and the relay's internal policy (see also the description of `kind:39003`).
```js
```json
{
"kind": 90xx,
"content": "optional reason",
"tags": [
["h", "<group-id>"],
["previous", ...]
["previous", /*...*/]
]
}
```
Each moderation action uses a different kind and requires different arguments, which are given as tags. These are defined in the following table:
| kind | name | tags |
| --- | --- | --- |
| 9000 | `add-user` | `p` (pubkey hex) |
| 9001 | `remove-user` | `p` (pubkey hex) |
| 9002 | `edit-metadata` | `name`, `about`, `picture` (string) |
| 9003 | `add-permission` | `p` (pubkey), `permission` (name) |
| 9004 | `remove-permission` | `p` (pubkey), `permission` (name) |
| 9005 | `delete-event` | `e` (id hex) |
| 9006 | `edit-group-status` | `public` or `private`, `open` or `closed` |
| 9007 | `create-group` | |
| 9008 | `delete-group` | |
| kind | name | tags |
| --- | --- | --- |
| 9000 | `add-user` | `p` with pubkey hex and optional roles |
| 9001 | `remove-user` | `p` with pubkey hex |
| 9002 | `edit-metadata` | fields from `kind:39000` to be modified |
| 9005 | `delete-event` | |
| 9007 | `create-group` | |
| 9008 | `delete-group` | |
It's expected that the group state (of who is an allowed member or not, who is an admin and with which permission or not, what are the group name and picture etc) can be fully reconstructed from the canonical sequence of these events.
### Group metadata events
These events contain the group id in a `d` tag instead of the `h` tag. They MUST be created by the relay master key only and a single instance of each (or none) should exist at all times for each group. They are merely informative but should reflect the latest group state (as it was changed by moderation events over time).
- *group metadata* (`kind:39000`) (optional)
@@ -142,7 +188,9 @@ This event defines the metadata for the group -- basically how clients should di
If the group is forked and hosted in multiple relays, there will be multiple versions of this event in each different relay and so on.
```js
When this event is not found, clients may still connect to the group, but treat it as having a different status, `unmanaged`,
```jsonc
{
"kind": 39000,
"content": "",
@@ -154,7 +202,7 @@ If the group is forked and hosted in multiple relays, there will be multiple ver
["public"], // or ["private"]
["open"] // or ["closed"]
]
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -162,41 +210,29 @@ If the group is forked and hosted in multiple relays, there will be multiple ver
- *group admins* (`kind:39001`) (optional)
Similar to the group metadata, this event is supposed to be generated by relays that host the group.
Each admin is listed along with one or more roles. These roles SHOULD have a correspondence with the roles supported by the relay, as advertised by the `kind:39003` event.
Each admin gets a label that is only used for display purposes, and a list of permissions it has are listed afterwards. These permissions can inform client building UI, but ultimately are evaluated by the relay in order to become effective.
The list of capabilities, as defined by this NIP, for now, is the following:
- `add-user`
- `edit-metadata`
- `delete-event`
- `remove-user`
- `add-permission`
- `remove-permission`
- `edit-group-status`
- `delete-group`
```js
```jsonc
{
"kind": 39001,
"content": "list of admins for the pizza lovers group",
"tags": [
["d", "<group-id>"],
["p", "<pubkey1-as-hex>", "ceo", "add-user", "edit-metadata", "delete-event", "remove-user"],
["p", "<pubkey2-as-hex>", "secretary", "add-user", "delete-event"]
]
...
["p", "<pubkey1-as-hex>", "ceo"],
["p", "<pubkey2-as-hex>", "secretary", "gardener"],
// other pubkeys...
],
// other fields...
}
```
- *group members* (`kind:39002`) (optional)
Similar to *group admins*, this event is supposed to be generated by relays that host the group.
It's a list of pubkeys that are members of the group. Relays might choose to not to publish this information, to restrict what pubkeys can fetch it or to only display a subset of the members in it.
It's a NIP-51-like list of pubkeys that are members of the group. Relays might choose to not to publish this information or to restrict what pubkeys can fetch it.
Clients should not assume this will always be present or that it will contain a full list of members.
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 39002,
"content": "list of members for the pizza lovers group",
@@ -205,10 +241,48 @@ It's a NIP-51-like list of pubkeys that are members of the group. Relays might c
["p", "<admin1>"],
["p", "<member-pubkey1>"],
["p", "<member-pubkey2>"],
]
// other pubkeys...
],
// other fields...
}
```
## Storing the list of groups a user belongs to
- *group roles* (`kind:39003`) (optional)
A definition for kind `10009` was included in [NIP-51](51.md) that allows clients to store the list of groups a user wants to remember being in.
This is an event that MAY be published by the relay informing users and clients about what are the roles supported by this relay according to its internal logic.
For example, a relay may choose to support the roles `"admin"` and `"moderator"`, in which the `"admin"` will be allowed to edit the group metadata, delete messages and remove users from the group, while the `"moderator"` can only delete messages (or the relay may choose to call these roles `"ceo"` and `"secretary"` instead, the exact role name is not relevant).
The process through which the relay decides what roles to support and how to handle moderation events internally based on them is specific to each relay and not specified here.
```jsonc
{
"kind": 39003,
"content": "list of roles supported by this group",
"tags": [
["d", "<group-id>"],
["role", "<role-name>", "<optional-description>"],
["role", "<role-name>", "<optional-description>"],
// other roles...
],
// other fields...
}
```
## Implementation quirks
### Checking your own membership in a group
The latest of either `kind:9000` or `kind:9001` events present in a group should tell a user that they are currently members of the group or if they were removed. In case none of these exist the user is assumed to not be a member of the group -- unless the group is `unmanaged`, in which case the user is assumed to be a member.
### Adding yourself to a group
When a group is `open`, anyone can send a `kind:9021` event to it in order to be added, then expect a `kind:9000` event to be emitted confirming that the user was added. The same happens with `closed` groups, except in that case a user may only send a `kind:9021` if it has an invite code.
### Storing your list of groups
A definition for `kind:10009` was included in [NIP-51](51.md) that allows clients to store the list of groups a user wants to remember being in.
### Using `unmanaged` relays
To prevent event leakage, replay and confusion, when using `unmanaged` relays, clients should include the [NIP-70](70.md) `-` tag, as just the `previous` tag won't be checked by other `unmanaged` relays.

16
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@@ -54,3 +54,19 @@ In kind 1 events, the `content` should be emojified.
"created_at": 1682630000
}
```
### Kind 7 events
In kind 7 events, the `content` should be emojified.
```json
{
"kind": 7,
"content": ":dezh:",
"tags": [
["emoji", "dezh", "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/dezh-tech/brand-assets/main/dezh/logo/black-normal.svg"]
],
"pubkey": "79c2cae114ea28a981e7559b4fe7854a473521a8d22a66bbab9fa248eb820ff6",
"created_at": 1682630000
}
```

32
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@@ -2,13 +2,13 @@ NIP-32
======
Labeling
---------
--------
`draft` `optional`
This NIP defines two new indexable tags to label events and a new event kind (`kind:1985`) to attach those labels to existing events. This supports several use cases, including distributed moderation, collection management, license assignment, and content classification.
New Tags:
New Tags:
- `L` denotes a label namespace
- `l` denotes a label
@@ -57,7 +57,7 @@ Example events
A suggestion that multiple pubkeys be associated with the `permies` topic.
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 1985,
"tags": [
@@ -66,13 +66,13 @@ A suggestion that multiple pubkeys be associated with the `permies` topic.
["p", <pubkey1>, <relay_url>],
["p", <pubkey2>, <relay_url>]
],
...
// other fields...
}
```
A report flagging violence toward a human being as defined by ontology.example.com.
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 1985,
"tags": [
@@ -81,13 +81,13 @@ A report flagging violence toward a human being as defined by ontology.example.c
["p", <pubkey1>, <relay_url>],
["p", <pubkey2>, <relay_url>]
],
...
// other fields...
}
```
A moderation suggestion for a chat event.
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 1985,
"tags": [
@@ -95,13 +95,13 @@ A moderation suggestion for a chat event.
["l", "approve", "nip28.moderation"],
["e", <kind40_event_id>, <relay_url>]
],
...
// other fields...
}
```
Assignment of a license to an event.
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 1985,
"tags": [
@@ -109,14 +109,14 @@ Assignment of a license to an event.
["l", "MIT", "license"],
["e", <event_id>, <relay_url>]
],
...
// other fields...
}
```
Publishers can self-label by adding `l` tags to their own non-1985 events. In this case, the kind 1 event's author
is labeling their note as being related to Milan, Italy using ISO 3166-2.
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
@@ -124,13 +124,13 @@ is labeling their note as being related to Milan, Italy using ISO 3166-2.
["l", "IT-MI", "ISO-3166-2"]
],
"content": "It's beautiful here in Milan!",
...
// other fields...
}
```
Author is labeling their note language as English using ISO-639-1.
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
@@ -138,7 +138,7 @@ Author is labeling their note language as English using ISO-639-1.
["l", "en", "ISO-639-1"]
],
"content": "English text",
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -146,7 +146,7 @@ Other Notes
-----------
When using this NIP to bulk-label many targets at once, events may be requested for deletion using [NIP-09](09.md) and a replacement
may be published. We have opted not to use parameterizable/replaceable events for this due to the
may be published. We have opted not to use addressable/replaceable events for this due to the
complexity in coming up with a standard `d` tag. In order to avoid ambiguity when querying,
publishers SHOULD limit labeling events to a single namespace.
@@ -169,7 +169,7 @@ be handled in some other way.
Appendix: Known Ontologies
-------------------------
--------------------------
Below is a non-exhaustive list of ontologies currently in widespread use.

14
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@@ -104,15 +104,20 @@ The first patch in a series MAY be a cover letter in the format produced by `git
## Issues
Issues are Markdown text that is just human-readable conversational threads related to the repository: bug reports, feature requests, questions or comments of any kind. Like patches, these SHOULD be sent to the relays specified in that repository's announcement event's `"relays"` tag.
Issues are Markdown text that is just human-readable conversational threads related to the repository: bug reports, feature requests, questions or comments of any kind. Like patches, these SHOULD be sent to the relays specified in that repository's announcement event's `"relays"` tag.
```jsonc
Issues may have a `subject` tag, which clients can utilize to display a header. Additionally, one or more `t` tags may be included to provide labels for the issue.
```json
{
"kind": 1621,
"content": "<markdown text>",
"tags": [
["a", "30617:<base-repo-owner-pubkey>:<base-repo-id>"],
["p", "<repository-owner>"]
["subject", "<issue-subject>"]
["t", "<issue-label>"]
["t", "<another-issue-label>"]
]
}
```
@@ -132,8 +137,9 @@ Replies are also Markdown text. The difference is that they MUST be issued as re
// other "e" and "p" tags should be applied here when necessary, following the threading rules of NIP-10
["p", "<patch-author-pubkey-hex>", "", "mention"],
["e", "<previous-reply-id-hex>", "", "reply"],
// ...
]
// rest of tags...
],
// other fields...
}
```

4
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@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ NIP-35
======
Torrents
-----------
--------
`draft` `optional`
@@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ A second level prefix should be included where the database supports multiple me
In some cases the url mapping isnt direct, mapping the url in general is out of scope for this NIP, the section above is only a guide so that implementers have enough information to succsesfully map the url if they wish.
```jsonc
```json
{
"kind": 2003,
"content": "<long-description-pre-formatted>",

59
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@@ -0,0 +1,59 @@
NIP-37
======
Editable Short Notes
--------------------
`draft` `optional`
This NIP describes a flow for editing `kind:1` notes that is mostly backwards-compatible (as long as clients support [NIP-09](./09.md) properly).
The flow for editing a `kind:1` note consists of creating a new `kind:1` note to be published in its place, then issuing a `kind:5` delete request for the first, in both cases attaching special tags that denote the nature of the operation to clients that want to support a more rich edit flow.
## Example flow
Support `<bob>` publishes
```jsonc
{
"id": "aaaaa",
"kind": 1,
"pubkey": "<bob>",
"content": "ehllo"
}
```
And now, for whatever, reason, he wants to edit the note to say "hello", so his client will publish the following two events:
```jsonc
{
"id": "bbbbbb",
"kind": 1,
"pubkey": "<bob>",
"content": "hello",
"tags": [
["s", "aaaaaa"] // this indicates the note that is being replaced
]
}
{
"kind": 5,
"pubkey": "<bob>",
"tags": [
["e", "aaaaaa"], // this indicates the note that will be deleted in all non-upgraded clients
["edit", "bbbbbb"], // this indicates the notes that replaced the one just deleted
]
}
```
## Backwards-compatibility
For all non-upgraded clients, this operation will look like a normal delete-and-replace. Replies, likes and everything else sent to node `aaaaaa` will be lost, but the feed will be intact and fine, with no need for any custom handling or complex replaceability.
## Progressive enhancement
Progressive enhancement may be applied, for example: when a user clicks to open note `bbbbbb` the client might try to query for `{"ids": ["aaaaaa"]}` upon seeing the `s` tag. And vice-versa, upon opening any other note a client might query for `{"#s": ["..."]}` to check if any edit is available. Both operations can enhance the focused note screen, but they don't have to be performed while loading a feed, and they remain strictly optional regardless.
## Full-blown upgrade
More complex clients that want to treat edits as pure edits and note as standalone notes may choose to hide any `kind:1` note that contains an `s` tag as a standalone entity, instead choosing to attach it to its "parent" that was edited. That must be combined with a refusal to _actually_ delete notes whenever the `kind:5` deletion request includes an `edit` tag. Such deletion request would then be only used as hints that an edit was performed, so it can be fetched and the note contents replaced in-place.

8
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@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ NIP-38
======
User Statuses
--------------
-------------
`draft` `optional`
@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ A special event with `kind:30315` "User Status" is defined as an *optionally exp
For example:
```js
```json
{
"kind": 30315,
"content": "Sign up for nostrasia!",
@@ -26,7 +26,9 @@ For example:
["r", "https://nostr.world"]
],
}
```
```json
{
"kind": 30315,
"content": "Intergalatic - Beastie Boys",
@@ -44,7 +46,7 @@ Two common status types are defined: `general` and `music`. `general` represent
Any other status types can be used but they are not defined by this NIP.
The status MAY include an `r`, `p`, `e` or `a` tag linking to a URL, profile, note, or parameterized replaceable event.
The status MAY include an `r`, `p`, `e` or `a` tag linking to a URL, profile, note, or addressable event.
The `content` MAY include emoji(s), or [NIP-30](30.md) custom emoji(s). If the `content` is an empty string then the client should clear the status.

5
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@@ -13,7 +13,8 @@ Nostr protocol users may have other online identities such as usernames, profile
## `i` tag on a metadata event
A new optional `i` tag is introduced for `kind 0` metadata event defined in [NIP-01](01.md):
```json
```jsonc
{
"id": <id>,
"pubkey": <pubkey>,
@@ -23,7 +24,7 @@ A new optional `i` tag is introduced for `kind 0` metadata event defined in [NIP
["i", "mastodon:bitcoinhackers.org/@semisol", "109775066355589974"]
["i", "telegram:1087295469", "nostrdirectory/770"]
],
...
// other fields...
}
```

8
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@@ -22,13 +22,13 @@ A relay may want to require clients to authenticate to access restricted resourc
This NIP defines a new message, `AUTH`, which relays CAN send when they support authentication and clients can send to relays when they want to authenticate. When sent by relays the message has the following form:
```json
```
["AUTH", <challenge-string>]
```
And, when sent by clients, the following form:
```json
```
["AUTH", <signed-event-json>]
```
@@ -38,14 +38,14 @@ And, when sent by clients, the following form:
The signed event is an ephemeral event not meant to be published or queried, it must be of `kind: 22242` and it should have at least two tags, one for the relay URL and one for the challenge string as received from the relay. Relays MUST exclude `kind: 22242` events from being broadcasted to any client. `created_at` should be the current time. Example:
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 22242,
"tags": [
["relay", "wss://relay.example.com/"],
["challenge", "challengestringhere"]
],
...
// other fields...
}
```

4
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@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
NIP-44
=====
======
Encrypted Payloads (Versioned)
------------------------------
@@ -142,6 +142,8 @@ validation rules, refer to BIP-340.
The operation produces a shared point, and we encode the shared point's 32-byte x coordinate, using method
`bytes(P)` from BIP340. Private and public keys must be validated as per BIP340: pubkey must be a valid,
on-curve point, and private key must be a scalar in range `[1, secp256k1_order - 1]`.
NIP44 doesn't do hashing of the output: keep this in mind, because some libraries hash it using sha256.
As an example, in libsecp256k1, unhashed version is available in `secp256k1_ec_pubkey_tweak_mul`
- Operators
- `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`.

2
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@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ NIP-45
======
Event Counts
--------------
------------
`draft` `optional`

91
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@@ -1,4 +1,12 @@
# NIP-46 - Nostr Remote Signing
NIP-46
======
Nostr Remote Signing
--------------------
## Changes
`remote-signer-key` is introduced, passed in bunker url, clients must differentiate between `remote-signer-pubkey` and `user-pubkey`, must call `get_public_key` after connect.
## Rationale
@@ -8,51 +16,53 @@ This NIP describes a method for 2-way communication between a remote signer and
## Terminology
- **Local keypair**: A local public and private key-pair used to encrypt content and communicate with the remote signer. Usually created by the client application.
- **Remote user pubkey**: The public key that the user wants to sign as. The remote signer has control of the private key that matches this public key.
- **Remote signer pubkey**: This is the public key of the remote signer itself. This is needed in both `create_account` command because you don't yet have a remote user pubkey.
- **user**: A person that is trying to use Nostr.
- **client**: A user-facing application that _user_ is looking at and clicking buttons in. This application will send requests to _remote-signer_.
- **remote-signer**: A daemon or server running somewhere that will answer requests from _client_, also known as "bunker".
- **client-keypair/pubkey**: The keys generated by _client_. Used to encrypt content and communicate with _remote-signer_.
- **remote-signer-keypair/pubkey**: The keys used by _remote-signer_ to encrypt content and communicate with _client_. This keypair MAY be same as _user-keypair_, but not necessarily.
- **user-keypair/pubkey**: The actual keys representing _user_ (that will be used to sign events in response to `sign_event` requests, for example). The _remote-signer_ generally has control over these keys.
All pubkeys specified in this NIP are in hex format.
## Initiating a connection
To initiate a connection between a client and a remote signer there are a few different options.
There are two ways to initiate a connection:
### Direct connection initiated by remote signer
### Direct connection initiated by _remote-signer_
This is most common in a situation where you have your own nsecbunker or other type of remote signer and want to connect through a client that supports remote signing.
The remote signer would provide a connection token in the form:
_remote-signer_ provides connection token in the form:
```
bunker://<remote-user-pubkey>?relay=<wss://relay-to-connect-on>&relay=<wss://another-relay-to-connect-on>&secret=<optional-secret-value>
bunker://<remote-signer-pubkey>?relay=<wss://relay-to-connect-on>&relay=<wss://another-relay-to-connect-on>&secret=<optional-secret-value>
```
This token is pasted into the client by the user and the client then uses the details to connect to the remote signer via the specified relay(s). Optional secret can be used for single successfully established connection only, remote signer SHOULD ignore new attempts to establish connection with old optional secret.
_user_ pastes this token on _client_, which then uses the details to connect to _remote-signer_ via the specified relays. Optional secret can be used for single successfully established connection only, _remote-signer_ SHOULD ignore new attempts to establish connection with old optional secret.
### Direct connection initiated by the client
In this case, basically the opposite direction of the first case, the client provides a connection token (or encodes the token in a QR code) and the signer initiates a connection to the client via the specified relay(s).
In this case, basically the opposite direction of the first case, _client_ provides a connection token (or encodes the token in a QR code) and _remote-signer_ initiates a connection via the specified relays.
```
nostrconnect://<local-keypair-pubkey>?relay=<wss://relay-to-connect-on>&metadata=<json metadata in the form: {"name":"...", "url": "...", "description": "..."}>
nostrconnect://<client-pubkey>?relay=<wss://relay-to-connect-on>&metadata=<json metadata in the form: {"name":"...", "url": "...", "description": "..."}>
```
## The flow
1. Client creates a local keypair. This keypair doesn't need to be communicated to the user since it's largely disposable (i.e. the user doesn't need to see this pubkey). Clients might choose to store it locally and they should delete it when the user logs out.
2. Client gets the remote user pubkey (either via a `bunker://` connection string or a NIP-05 login-flow; shown below)
3. Clients use the local keypair to send requests to the remote signer by `p`-tagging and encrypting to the remote user pubkey.
4. The remote signer responds to the client by `p`-tagging and encrypting to the local keypair pubkey.
1. _client_ generates `client-keypair`. This keypair doesn't need to be communicated to _user_ since it's largely disposable. _client_ might choose to store it locally and they should delete it on logout;
2. _client_ gets `remote-signer-pubkey` (either via a `bunker://` connection string or a NIP-05 login-flow; shown below);
3. _client_ use `client-keypair` to send requests to _remote-signer_ by `p`-tagging and encrypting to `remote-signer-pubkey`;
4. _remote-signer_ responds to _client_ by `p`-tagging and encrypting to the `client-pubkey`.
### Example flow for signing an event
- Remote user pubkey (e.g. signing as) `fa984bd7dbb282f07e16e7ae87b26a2a7b9b90b7246a44771f0cf5ae58018f52`
- Local pubkey is `eff37350d839ce3707332348af4549a96051bd695d3223af4aabce4993531d86`
- `remote-signer-pubkey` is `fa984bd7dbb282f07e16e7ae87b26a2a7b9b90b7246a44771f0cf5ae58018f52`
- `user-pubkey` is also `fa984bd7dbb282f07e16e7ae87b26a2a7b9b90b7246a44771f0cf5ae58018f52`
- `client-pubkey` is `eff37350d839ce3707332348af4549a96051bd695d3223af4aabce4993531d86`
#### Signature request
```json
```js
{
"kind": 24133,
"pubkey": "eff37350d839ce3707332348af4549a96051bd695d3223af4aabce4993531d86",
@@ -66,13 +76,13 @@ nostrconnect://<local-keypair-pubkey>?relay=<wss://relay-to-connect-on>&metadata
created_at: 1714078911
}>)]
}),
"tags": [["p", "fa984bd7dbb282f07e16e7ae87b26a2a7b9b90b7246a44771f0cf5ae58018f52"]], // p-tags the remote user pubkey
"tags": [["p", "fa984bd7dbb282f07e16e7ae87b26a2a7b9b90b7246a44771f0cf5ae58018f52"]], // p-tags the remote-signer-pubkey
}
```
#### Response event
```json
```js
{
"kind": 24133,
"pubkey": "fa984bd7dbb282f07e16e7ae87b26a2a7b9b90b7246a44771f0cf5ae58018f52",
@@ -80,7 +90,7 @@ nostrconnect://<local-keypair-pubkey>?relay=<wss://relay-to-connect-on>&metadata
"id": <random_string>,
"result": json_stringified(<signed-event>)
}),
"tags": [["p", "eff37350d839ce3707332348af4549a96051bd695d3223af4aabce4993531d86"]], // p-tags the local keypair pubkey
"tags": [["p", "eff37350d839ce3707332348af4549a96051bd695d3223af4aabce4993531d86"]], // p-tags the client-pubkey
}
```
@@ -90,20 +100,18 @@ nostrconnect://<local-keypair-pubkey>?relay=<wss://relay-to-connect-on>&metadata
## Request Events `kind: 24133`
```json
```js
{
"id": <id>,
"kind": 24133,
"pubkey": <local_keypair_pubkey>,
"content": <nip04(<request>)>,
"tags": [["p", <remote_user_pubkey>]], // NB: in the `create_account` event, the remote signer pubkey should be `p` tagged.
"created_at": <unix timestamp in seconds>
"tags": [["p", <remote-signer-pubkey>]],
}
```
The `content` field is a JSON-RPC-like message that is [NIP-04](04.md) encrypted and has the following structure:
```json
```jsonc
{
"id": <random_string>,
"method": <method_name>,
@@ -121,15 +129,16 @@ Each of the following are methods that the client sends to the remote signer.
| Command | Params | Result |
| ------------------------ | ------------------------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| `connect` | `[<remote_user_pubkey>, <optional_secret>, <optional_requested_permissions>]` | "ack" |
| `connect` | `[<user_pubkey>, <optional_secret>, <optional_requested_permissions>]` | "ack" |
| `sign_event` | `[<{kind, content, tags, created_at}>]` | `json_stringified(<signed_event>)` |
| `ping` | `[]` | "pong" |
| `get_relays` | `[]` | `json_stringified({<relay_url>: {read: <boolean>, write: <boolean>}})` |
| `get_public_key` | `[]` | `<hex-pubkey>` |
| `get_public_key` | `[]` | `<user-pubkey>` |
| `nip04_encrypt` | `[<third_party_pubkey>, <plaintext_to_encrypt>]` | `<nip04_ciphertext>` |
| `nip04_decrypt` | `[<third_party_pubkey>, <nip04_ciphertext_to_decrypt>]` | `<plaintext>` |
| `nip44_encrypt` | `[<third_party_pubkey>, <plaintext_to_encrypt>]` | `<nip44_ciphertext>` |
| `nip44_decrypt` | `[<third_party_pubkey>, <nip44_ciphertext_to_decrypt>]` | `<plaintext>` |
| `create_account` | `[<username>, <domain>, <optional_email>, <optional_requested_permissions>]` | `<newly_created_user_pubkey>` |
### Requested permissions
@@ -141,9 +150,9 @@ The `connect` method may be provided with `optional_requested_permissions` for u
{
"id": <id>,
"kind": 24133,
"pubkey": <remote_signer_pubkey>,
"pubkey": <remote-signer-pubkey>,
"content": <nip04(<response>)>,
"tags": [["p", <local_keypair_pubkey>]],
"tags": [["p", <client-pubkey>]],
"created_at": <unix timestamp in seconds>
}
```
@@ -180,18 +189,6 @@ Clients should display (in a popup or new tab) the URL from the `error` field an
![signing-example-with-auth-challenge](https://i.nostr.build/W3aj.png)
## Remote Signer Commands
Remote signers might support additional commands when communicating directly with it. These commands follow the same flow as noted above, the only difference is that when the client sends a request event, the `p`-tag is the pubkey of the remote signer itself and the `content` payload is encrypted to the same remote signer pubkey.
### Methods/Commands
Each of the following are methods that the client sends to the remote signer.
| Command | Params | Result |
| ---------------- | ------------------------------------------ | ------------------------------------ |
| `create_account` | `[<username>, <domain>, <optional_email>, <optional_requested_permissions>]` | `<newly_created_remote_user_pubkey>` |
## Appendix
### NIP-05 Login Flow
@@ -200,7 +197,7 @@ Clients might choose to present a more familiar login flow, so users can type a
When the user types a NIP-05 the client:
- Queries the `/.well-known/nostr.json` file from the domain for the NIP-05 address provided to get the user's pubkey (this is the **remote user pubkey**)
- Queries the `/.well-known/nostr.json` file from the domain for the NIP-05 address provided to get the user's pubkey (this is the `user-pubkey`)
- In the same `/.well-known/nostr.json` file, queries for the `nip46` key to get the relays that the remote signer will be listening on.
- Now the client has enough information to send commands to the remote signer on behalf of the user.
@@ -212,9 +209,9 @@ In this last case, most often used to facilitate an OAuth-like signin flow, the
First the client will query for `kind: 31990` events that have a `k` tag of `24133`.
These are generally shown to a user, and once the user selects which remote signer to use and provides the remote user pubkey they want to use (via npub, pubkey, or nip-05 value), the client can initiate a connection. Note that it's on the user to select the remote signer that is actually managing the remote key that they would like to use in this case. If the remote user pubkey is managed on another remote signer, the connection will fail.
These are generally shown to a user, and once the user selects which remote signer to use and provides the `user-pubkey` they want to use (via npub, pubkey, or nip-05 value), the client can initiate a connection. Note that it's on the user to select the _remote-signer_ that is actually managing the `user-keypair` that they would like to use in this case. If the `user-pubkey` is managed on another _remote-signer_ the connection will fail.
In addition, it's important that clients validate that the pubkey of the announced remote signer matches the pubkey of the `_` entry in the `/.well-known/nostr.json` file of the remote signer's announced domain.
In addition, it's important that clients validate that the pubkey of the announced _remote-signer_ matches the pubkey of the `_` entry in the `/.well-known/nostr.json` file of the remote signer's announced domain.
Clients that allow users to create new accounts should also consider validating the availability of a given username in the namespace of remote signer's domain by checking the `/.well-known/nostr.json` file for existing usernames. Clients can then show users feedback in the UI before sending a `create_account` event to the remote signer and receiving an error in return. Ideally, remote signers would also respond with understandable error messages if a client tries to create an account with an existing username.

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@@ -173,7 +173,7 @@ Request:
"amount": 123, // invoice amount in msats, required
"pubkey": "03...", // payee pubkey, required
"preimage": "0123456789abcdef...", // preimage of the payment, optional
"tlv_records: [ // tlv records, optional
"tlv_records": [ // tlv records, optional
{
"type": 5482373484, // tlv type
"value": "0123456789abcdef" // hex encoded tlv value
@@ -208,7 +208,7 @@ Request:
"method": "multi_pay_keysend",
"params": {
"keysends": [
{"id": "4c5b24a351", pubkey": "03...", "amount": 123},
{"id": "4c5b24a351", "pubkey": "03...", "amount": 123},
{"id": "3da52c32a1", "pubkey": "02...", "amount": 567, "preimage": "abc123..", "tlv_records": [{"type": 696969, "value": "77616c5f6872444873305242454d353736"}]},
],
}
@@ -358,8 +358,7 @@ Request:
```jsonc
{
"method": "get_balance",
"params": {
}
"params": {}
}
```
@@ -379,8 +378,7 @@ Request:
```jsonc
{
"method": "get_info",
"params": {
}
"params": {}
}
```

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@@ -15,9 +15,9 @@ extensible framework for performing such queries.
## `search` filter field
A new `search` field is introduced for `REQ` messages from clients:
```json
```jsonc
{
...
// other fields on filter object...
"search": <string>
}
```

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@@ -111,7 +111,7 @@ Some clients have used these lists in the past, but they should work on transiti
### A _release artifact set_ of an Example App
```json
```jsonc
{
"id": "567b41fc9060c758c4216fe5f8d3df7c57daad7ae757fa4606f0c39d4dd220ef",
"pubkey": "d6dc95542e18b8b7aec2f14610f55c335abebec76f3db9e58c254661d0593a0c",

6
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@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ This kind of calendar event starts on a date and ends before a different date in
#### Format
The format uses a parameterized replaceable event kind `31922`.
The format uses an _addressable event_ of `kind:31922`.
The `.content` of these events should be a detailed description of the calendar event. It is required but can be an empty string.
@@ -79,7 +79,7 @@ This kind of calendar event spans between a start time and end time.
#### Format
The format uses a parameterized replaceable event kind `31923`.
The format uses an _addressable event_ kind `31923`.
The `.content` of these events should be a detailed description of the calendar event. It is required but can be an empty string.
@@ -193,7 +193,7 @@ The RSVP MAY tag the author of the calendar event it is in response to using a `
### Format
The format uses a parameterized replaceable event kind `31925`.
The format uses an _addressable event_ kind `31925`.
The `.content` of these events is optional and should be a free-form note that adds more context to this calendar event response.

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@@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ A special event with `kind:30311` "Live Event" is defined as an _addressable eve
For example:
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 30311,
"tags": [
@@ -35,10 +35,10 @@ For example:
["p", "91cf9..4e5ca", "wss://provider1.com/", "Host", "<proof>"],
["p", "14aeb..8dad4", "wss://provider2.com/nostr", "Speaker"],
["p", "612ae..e610f", "ws://provider3.com/ws", "Participant"],
["relays", "wss://one.com", "wss://two.com", ...]
["relays", "wss://one.com", "wss://two.com", /*...*/]
],
"content": "",
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -64,14 +64,14 @@ This feature is important to avoid malicious event owners adding large account h
Event `kind:1311` is live chat's channel message. Clients MUST include the `a` tag of the activity with a `root` marker. Other Kind-1 tags such as `reply` and `mention` can also be used.
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 1311,
"tags": [
["a", "30311:<Community event author pubkey>:<d-identifier of the community>", "<Optional relay url>", "root"],
],
"content": "Zaps to live streams is beautiful.",
...
// other fields...
}
```

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@@ -6,12 +6,12 @@ Wiki
`draft` `optional`
This NIP defines `kind:30818` (an _addressable event_) for long-form text content similar to [NIP-23](23.md), but with one important difference: articles are meant to be descriptions, or encyclopedia entries, of particular subjects, and it's expected that multiple people will write articles about the exact same subjects, with either small variations or completely independent content.
This NIP defines `kind:30818` (an _addressable event_) for descriptions (or encyclopedia entries) of particular subjects, and it's expected that multiple people will write articles about the exact same subjects, with either small variations or completely independent content.
Articles are identified by lowercase, normalized ascii `d` tags.
### Articles
```jsonc
```json
{
"content": "A wiki is a hypertext publication collaboratively edited and managed by its own audience.",
"tags": [
@@ -26,21 +26,25 @@ Articles are identified by lowercase, normalized ascii `d` tags.
- Any non-letter character MUST be converted to a `-`.
- All letters MUST be converted to lowercase.
### Content rules
### Content
The content should be Asciidoc, following the same rules as of [NIP-23](23.md), although it takes some extra (optional) metadata tags:
The `content` should be Asciidoc with two extra functionalities: **wikilinks** and **nostr:...** links.
- `title`: for when the display title should be different from the `d` tag.
- `summary`: for display in lists.
- `a` and `e`: for referencing the original event a wiki article was forked from.
One extra functionality is added: **wikilinks**. Unlike normal Asciidoc links `[]()` that link to webpages, wikilinks `[[]]` link to other articles in the wiki. In this case, the wiki is the entirety of Nostr. Clicking on a wikilink should cause the client to ask relays for events with `d` tags equal to the target of that wikilink.
Unlike normal Asciidoc links `http://example.com[]` that link to external webpages, wikilinks `[[]]` link to other articles in the wiki. In this case, the wiki is the entirety of Nostr. Clicking on a wikilink should cause the client to ask relays for events with `d` tags equal to the target of that wikilink.
Wikilinks can take these two forms:
1. `[[Target Page]]` -- in this case it will link to the page `target-page` (according to `d` tag normalization rules above) and be displayed as `Target Page`;
2. `[[target page|see this]]` -- in this case it will link to the page `target-page`, but will be displayed as `see this`.
`nostr:...` links, as per [NIP-21](21.md), should link to profiles or arbitrary Nostr events. Although it is not recommended to link to specific versions of articles -- instead the _wikilink_ syntax should be preferred, since it should be left to the reader and their client to decide what version of any given article they want to read.
### Optional extra tags
- `title`: for when the display title should be different from the `d` tag.
- `summary`: for display in lists.
- `a` and `e`: for referencing the original event a wiki article was forked from.
### Merge Requests
Event `kind:818` represents a request to merge from a forked article into the source. It is directed to a pubkey and references the original article and the modified event.
@@ -96,13 +100,13 @@ Asciidoc has a strict spec, multiple implementations in many languages, and supp
# Appendix 1: Merge requests
Users can request other users to get their entries merged into someone else's entry by creating a `kind:818` event.
```jsonc
```json
{
"content": "I added information about how to make hot ice-creams",
"kind": 818,
"tags": [
[ "a", "30818:<destination-pubkey>:hot-ice-creams", "<relay-url>" ],
[ "e", "<version-against-which-the-modification-was-made>", "<relay-url>' ],
[ "e", "<version-against-which-the-modification-was-made>", "<relay-url>" ],
[ "p", "<destination-pubkey>" ],
[ "e", "<version-to-be-merged>", "<relay-url>", "source" ]
]
@@ -114,4 +118,4 @@ Users can request other users to get their entries merged into someone else's en
`e` tag: optional version of the article in which this modifications is based
`e` tag with `source` marker: the ID of the event that should be merged. This event id MUST be of a `kind:30818` as defined in this NIP.
The destination-pubkey (the pubkey being requested to merge something into their article can create [[NIP-25]] reactions that tag the `kind:818` event with `+` or `-`
The destination-pubkey is the pubkey being requested to merge something into their article can create [[NIP-25]] reactions that tag the `kind:818` event with `+` or `-`

184
55.md
View File

@@ -1,6 +1,8 @@
# NIP-55
NIP-55
======
## Android Signer Application
Android Signer Application
--------------------------
`draft` `optional`
@@ -51,8 +53,8 @@ val launcher = rememberLauncherForActivityResult(
Toast.LENGTH_SHORT
).show()
} else {
val signature = activityResult.data?.getStringExtra("signature")
// Do something with signature ...
val result = activityResult.data?.getStringExtra("result")
// Do something with result ...
}
}
)
@@ -99,10 +101,10 @@ launcher.launch(intent)
context.startActivity(intent)
```
- result:
- If the user approved intent it will return the **npub** in the signature field
- If the user approved intent it will return the **pubkey** in the result field
```kotlin
val npub = intent.data?.getStringExtra("signature")
val pubkey = intent.data?.getStringExtra("result")
// The package name of the signer application
val packageName = intent.data?.getStringExtra("package")
```
@@ -116,16 +118,16 @@ launcher.launch(intent)
intent.putExtra("type", "sign_event")
// To handle results when not waiting between intents
intent.putExtra("id", event.id)
// Send the current logged in user npub
intent.putExtra("current_user", npub)
// Send the current logged in user pubkey
intent.putExtra("current_user", pubkey)
context.startActivity(intent)
```
- result:
- If the user approved intent it will return the **signature**, **id** and **event** fields
- If the user approved intent it will return the **result**, **id** and **event** fields
```kotlin
val signature = intent.data?.getStringExtra("signature")
val signature = intent.data?.getStringExtra("result")
// The id you sent
val id = intent.data?.getStringExtra("id")
val signedEventJson = intent.data?.getStringExtra("event")
@@ -140,18 +142,18 @@ launcher.launch(intent)
intent.putExtra("type", "nip04_encrypt")
// to control the result in your application in case you are not waiting the result before sending another intent
intent.putExtra("id", "some_id")
// Send the current logged in user npub
intent.putExtra("current_user", account.keyPair.pubKey.toNpub())
// Send the hex pubKey that will be used for encrypting the data
intent.putExtra("pubKey", pubKey)
// Send the current logged in user pubkey
intent.putExtra("current_user", account.keyPair.pubkey)
// Send the hex pubkey that will be used for encrypting the data
intent.putExtra("pubkey", pubkey)
context.startActivity(intent)
```
- result:
- If the user approved intent it will return the **signature** and **id** fields
- If the user approved intent it will return the **result** and **id** fields
```kotlin
val encryptedText = intent.data?.getStringExtra("signature")
val encryptedText = intent.data?.getStringExtra("result")
// the id you sent
val id = intent.data?.getStringExtra("id")
```
@@ -165,10 +167,10 @@ launcher.launch(intent)
intent.putExtra("type", "nip44_encrypt")
// to control the result in your application in case you are not waiting the result before sending another intent
intent.putExtra("id", "some_id")
// Send the current logged in user npub
intent.putExtra("current_user", account.keyPair.pubKey.toNpub())
// Send the hex pubKey that will be used for encrypting the data
intent.putExtra("pubKey", pubKey)
// Send the current logged in user pubkey
intent.putExtra("current_user", account.keyPair.pubkey)
// Send the hex pubkey that will be used for encrypting the data
intent.putExtra("pubkey", pubkey)
context.startActivity(intent)
```
@@ -190,18 +192,18 @@ launcher.launch(intent)
intent.putExtra("type", "nip04_decrypt")
// to control the result in your application in case you are not waiting the result before sending another intent
intent.putExtra("id", "some_id")
// Send the current logged in user npub
intent.putExtra("current_user", account.keyPair.pubKey.toNpub())
// Send the hex pubKey that will be used for decrypting the data
intent.putExtra("pubKey", pubKey)
// Send the current logged in user pubkey
intent.putExtra("current_user", account.keyPair.pubkey)
// Send the hex pubkey that will be used for decrypting the data
intent.putExtra("pubkey", pubkey)
context.startActivity(intent)
```
- result:
- If the user approved intent it will return the **signature** and **id** fields
- If the user approved intent it will return the **result** and **id** fields
```kotlin
val plainText = intent.data?.getStringExtra("signature")
val plainText = intent.data?.getStringExtra("result")
// the id you sent
val id = intent.data?.getStringExtra("id")
```
@@ -215,18 +217,41 @@ launcher.launch(intent)
intent.putExtra("type", "nip04_decrypt")
// to control the result in your application in case you are not waiting the result before sending another intent
intent.putExtra("id", "some_id")
// Send the current logged in user npub
intent.putExtra("current_user", account.keyPair.pubKey.toNpub())
// Send the hex pubKey that will be used for decrypting the data
intent.putExtra("pubKey", pubKey)
// Send the current logged in user pubkey
intent.putExtra("current_user", account.keyPair.pubkey)
// Send the hex pubkey that will be used for decrypting the data
intent.putExtra("pubkey", pubkey)
context.startActivity(intent)
```
- result:
- If the user approved intent it will return the **signature** and **id** fields
- If the user approved intent it will return the **result** and **id** fields
```kotlin
val plainText = intent.data?.getStringExtra("signature")
val plainText = intent.data?.getStringExtra("result")
// the id you sent
val id = intent.data?.getStringExtra("id")
```
- **get_relays**
- params:
```kotlin
val intent = Intent(Intent.ACTION_VIEW, Uri.parse("nostrsigner:"))
intent.`package` = "com.example.signer"
intent.putExtra("type", "get_relays")
// to control the result in your application in case you are not waiting the result before sending another intent
intent.putExtra("id", "some_id")
// Send the current logged in user pubkey
intent.putExtra("current_user", account.keyPair.pubkey)
context.startActivity(intent)
```
- result:
- If the user approved intent it will return the **result** and **id** fields
```kotlin
val relayJsonText = intent.data?.getStringExtra("result")
// the id you sent
val id = intent.data?.getStringExtra("id")
```
@@ -240,15 +265,15 @@ launcher.launch(intent)
intent.putExtra("type", "decrypt_zap_event")
// to control the result in your application in case you are not waiting the result before sending another intent
intent.putExtra("id", "some_id")
// Send the current logged in user npub
intent.putExtra("current_user", account.keyPair.pubKey.toNpub())
// Send the current logged in user pubkey
intent.putExtra("current_user", account.keyPair.pubkey)
context.startActivity(intent)
```
- result:
- If the user approved intent it will return the **signature** and **id** fields
- If the user approved intent it will return the **result** and **id** fields
```kotlin
val eventJson = intent.data?.getStringExtra("signature")
val eventJson = intent.data?.getStringExtra("result")
// the id you sent
val id = intent.data?.getStringExtra("id")
```
@@ -257,11 +282,11 @@ launcher.launch(intent)
To get the result back from Signer Application you should use contentResolver.query in Kotlin. If you are using another framework check the documentation of your framework or a third party library to get the result.
If the user did not check the "remember my choice" option, the npub is not in Signer Application or the signer type is not recognized the `contentResolver` will return null
If the user did not check the "remember my choice" option, the pubkey is not in Signer Application or the signer type is not recognized the `contentResolver` will return null
For the SIGN_EVENT type Signer Application returns two columns "signature" and "event". The column event is the signed event json
For the SIGN_EVENT type Signer Application returns two columns "result" and "event". The column event is the signed event json
For the other types Signer Application returns the column "signature"
For the other types Signer Application returns the column "result"
If the user chose to always reject the event, signer application will return the column "rejected" and you should not open signer application
@@ -280,15 +305,15 @@ If the user chose to always reject the event, signer application will return the
)
```
- result:
- Will return the **npub** in the signature column
- Will return the **pubkey** in the result column
```kotlin
if (result == null) return
if (result.moveToFirst()) {
val index = it.getColumnIndex("signature")
val index = it.getColumnIndex("result")
if (index < 0) return
val npub = it.getString(index)
val pubkey = it.getString(index)
}
```
@@ -298,20 +323,20 @@ If the user chose to always reject the event, signer application will return the
```kotlin
val result = context.contentResolver.query(
Uri.parse("content://com.example.signer.SIGN_EVENT"),
listOf("$eventJson", "", "${logged_in_user_npub}"),
listOf("$eventJson", "", "${logged_in_user_pubkey}"),
null,
null,
null
)
```
- result:
- Will return the **signature** and the **event** columns
- Will return the **result** and the **event** columns
```kotlin
if (result == null) return
if (result.moveToFirst()) {
val index = it.getColumnIndex("signature")
val index = it.getColumnIndex("result")
val indexJson = it.getColumnIndex("event")
val signature = it.getString(index)
val eventJson = it.getString(indexJson)
@@ -324,20 +349,20 @@ If the user chose to always reject the event, signer application will return the
```kotlin
val result = context.contentResolver.query(
Uri.parse("content://com.example.signer.NIP04_ENCRYPT"),
listOf("$plainText", "${hex_pub_key}", "${logged_in_user_npub}"),
listOf("$plainText", "${hex_pub_key}", "${logged_in_user_pubkey}"),
null,
null,
null
)
```
- result:
- Will return the **signature** column
- Will return the **result** column
```kotlin
if (result == null) return
if (result.moveToFirst()) {
val index = it.getColumnIndex("signature")
val index = it.getColumnIndex("result")
val encryptedText = it.getString(index)
}
```
@@ -348,20 +373,20 @@ If the user chose to always reject the event, signer application will return the
```kotlin
val result = context.contentResolver.query(
Uri.parse("content://com.example.signer.NIP44_ENCRYPT"),
listOf("$plainText", "${hex_pub_key}", "${logged_in_user_npub}"),
listOf("$plainText", "${hex_pub_key}", "${logged_in_user_pubkey}"),
null,
null,
null
)
```
- result:
- Will return the **signature** column
- Will return the **result** column
```kotlin
if (result == null) return
if (result.moveToFirst()) {
val index = it.getColumnIndex("signature")
val index = it.getColumnIndex("result")
val encryptedText = it.getString(index)
}
```
@@ -372,20 +397,20 @@ If the user chose to always reject the event, signer application will return the
```kotlin
val result = context.contentResolver.query(
Uri.parse("content://com.example.signer.NIP04_DECRYPT"),
listOf("$encryptedText", "${hex_pub_key}", "${logged_in_user_npub}"),
listOf("$encryptedText", "${hex_pub_key}", "${logged_in_user_pubkey}"),
null,
null,
null
)
```
- result:
- Will return the **signature** column
- Will return the **result** column
```kotlin
if (result == null) return
if (result.moveToFirst()) {
val index = it.getColumnIndex("signature")
val index = it.getColumnIndex("result")
val encryptedText = it.getString(index)
}
```
@@ -396,44 +421,68 @@ If the user chose to always reject the event, signer application will return the
```kotlin
val result = context.contentResolver.query(
Uri.parse("content://com.example.signer.NIP44_DECRYPT"),
listOf("$encryptedText", "${hex_pub_key}", "${logged_in_user_npub}"),
listOf("$encryptedText", "${hex_pub_key}", "${logged_in_user_pubkey}"),
null,
null,
null
)
```
- result:
- Will return the **signature** column
- Will return the **result** column
```kotlin
if (result == null) return
if (result.moveToFirst()) {
val index = it.getColumnIndex("signature")
val index = it.getColumnIndex("result")
val encryptedText = it.getString(index)
}
```
- **get_relays**
- params:
```kotlin
val result = context.contentResolver.query(
Uri.parse("content://com.example.signer.GET_RELAYS"),
listOf("${logged_in_user_pubkey}"),
null,
null,
null
)
```
- result:
- Will return the **result** column
```kotlin
if (result == null) return
if (result.moveToFirst()) {
val index = it.getColumnIndex("result")
val relayJsonText = it.getString(index)
}
```
- **decrypt_zap_event**
- params:
```kotlin
val result = context.contentResolver.query(
Uri.parse("content://com.example.signer.DECRYPT_ZAP_EVENT"),
listOf("$eventJson", "", "${logged_in_user_npub}"),
listOf("$eventJson", "", "${logged_in_user_pubkey}"),
null,
null,
null
)
```
- result:
- Will return the **signature** column
- Will return the **result** column
```kotlin
if (result == null) return
if (result.moveToFirst()) {
val index = it.getColumnIndex("signature")
val index = it.getColumnIndex("result")
val eventJson = it.getString(index)
}
```
@@ -470,28 +519,35 @@ Android intents and browser urls have limitations, so if you are using the `retu
- params:
```js
window.href = `nostrsigner:${plainText}?pubKey=${hex_pub_key}&compressionType=none&returnType=signature&type=nip04_encrypt&callbackUrl=https://example.com/?event=`;
window.href = `nostrsigner:${plainText}?pubkey=${hex_pub_key}&compressionType=none&returnType=signature&type=nip04_encrypt&callbackUrl=https://example.com/?event=`;
```
- **nip44_encrypt**
- params:
```js
window.href = `nostrsigner:${plainText}?pubKey=${hex_pub_key}&compressionType=none&returnType=signature&type=nip44_encrypt&callbackUrl=https://example.com/?event=`;
window.href = `nostrsigner:${plainText}?pubkey=${hex_pub_key}&compressionType=none&returnType=signature&type=nip44_encrypt&callbackUrl=https://example.com/?event=`;
```
- **nip04_decrypt**
- params:
```js
window.href = `nostrsigner:${encryptedText}?pubKey=${hex_pub_key}&compressionType=none&returnType=signature&type=nip04_decrypt&callbackUrl=https://example.com/?event=`;
window.href = `nostrsigner:${encryptedText}?pubkey=${hex_pub_key}&compressionType=none&returnType=signature&type=nip04_decrypt&callbackUrl=https://example.com/?event=`;
```
- **nip44_decrypt**
- params:
```js
window.href = `nostrsigner:${encryptedText}?pubKey=${hex_pub_key}&compressionType=none&returnType=signature&type=nip44_decrypt&callbackUrl=https://example.com/?event=`;
window.href = `nostrsigner:${encryptedText}?pubkey=${hex_pub_key}&compressionType=none&returnType=signature&type=nip44_decrypt&callbackUrl=https://example.com/?event=`;
```
- **get_relays**
- params:
```js
window.href = `nostrsigner:?compressionType=none&returnType=signature&type=get_relays&callbackUrl=https://example.com/?event=`;
```
- **decrypt_zap_event**

12
56.md
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@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ further qualification and querying.
Example events
--------------
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 1984,
"tags": [
@@ -50,9 +50,11 @@ Example events
["l", "NS-nud", "social.nos.ontology"]
],
"content": "",
...
// other fields...
}
```
```jsonc
{
"kind": 1984,
"tags": [
@@ -60,16 +62,18 @@ Example events
["p", <pubkey>]
],
"content": "He's insulting the king!",
...
// other fields...
}
```
```jsonc
{
"kind": 1984,
"tags": [
["p", <impersonator pubkey>, "impersonation"]
],
"content": "Profile is impersonating nostr:<victim bech32 pubkey>",
...
// other fields...
}
```

2
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@@ -171,7 +171,7 @@ A client can retrieve `zap receipt`s on events and pubkeys using a NIP-01 filter
When an event includes one or more `zap` tags, clients wishing to zap it SHOULD calculate the lnurl pay request based on the tags value instead of the event author's profile field. The tag's second argument is the `hex` string of the receiver's pub key and the third argument is the relay to download the receiver's metadata (Kind-0). An optional fourth parameter specifies the weight (a generalization of a percentage) assigned to the respective receiver. Clients should parse all weights, calculate a sum, and then a percentage to each receiver. If weights are not present, CLIENTS should equally divide the zap amount to all receivers. If weights are only partially present, receivers without a weight should not be zapped (`weight = 0`).
```js
```jsonc
{
"tags": [
[ "zap", "82341f882b6eabcd2ba7f1ef90aad961cf074af15b9ef44a09f9d2a8fbfbe6a2", "wss://nostr.oxtr.dev", "1" ], // 25%

15
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@@ -13,8 +13,7 @@ user profiles:
2. A "Badge Award" event is a kind `8` event with a single `a` tag referencing a "Badge Definition" event and one or more `p` tags, one for each pubkey the badge issuer wishes to award. Awarded badges are immutable and non-transferrable.
3. A "Profile Badges" event is defined as a parameterized replaceable event
with kind `30008` with a `d` tag with the value `profile_badges`.
3. A "Profile Badges" event is defined as an _addressable event_ with kind `30008` with a `d` tag with the value `profile_badges`.
Profile badges contain an ordered list of pairs of `a` and `e` tags referencing a `Badge Definition` and a `Badge Award` for each badge to be displayed.
### Badge Definition event
@@ -74,7 +73,7 @@ Clients SHOULD attempt to render the most appropriate badge thumbnail according
### Example of a Badge Definition event
```json
```jsonc
{
"pubkey": "alice",
"kind": 30009,
@@ -85,13 +84,13 @@ Clients SHOULD attempt to render the most appropriate badge thumbnail according
["image", "https://nostr.academy/awards/bravery.png", "1024x1024"],
["thumb", "https://nostr.academy/awards/bravery_256x256.png", "256x256"]
],
...
// other fields...
}
```
### Example of Badge Award event
```json
```jsonc
{
"id": "<badge award event id>",
"kind": 8,
@@ -101,14 +100,14 @@ Clients SHOULD attempt to render the most appropriate badge thumbnail according
["p", "bob", "wss://relay"],
["p", "charlie", "wss://relay"]
],
...
// other fields...
}
```
### Example of a Profile Badges event
Honorable Bob The Brave:
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 30008,
"pubkey": "bob",
@@ -119,6 +118,6 @@ Honorable Bob The Brave:
["a", "30009:alice:honor"],
["e", "<honor badge award event id>", "wss://nostr.academy"]
],
...
// other fields...
}
```

4
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@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ A `seal` is a `kind:13` event that wraps a `rumor` with the sender's regular key
to a receiver's pubkey but there is no `p` tag pointing to the receiver. There is no way to know who the rumor is for
without the receiver's or the sender's private key. The only public information in this event is who is signing it.
```js
```json
{
"id": "<id>",
"pubkey": "<real author's pubkey>",
@@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ Tags MUST must always be empty in a `kind:13`. The inner event MUST always be un
A `gift wrap` event is a `kind:1059` event that wraps any other event. `tags` SHOULD include any information
needed to route the event to its intended recipient, including the recipient's `p` tag or [NIP-13](13.md) proof of work.
```js
```json
{
"id": "<id>",
"pubkey": "<random, one-time-use pubkey>",

205
60.md Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,205 @@
# NIP-60
## Cashu Wallet
`draft` `optional`
This NIP defines the operations of a cashu-based wallet.
A cashu wallet is a wallet which information is stored in relays to make it accessible across applications.
The purpose of this NIP is:
* ease-of-use: new users immediately are able to receive funds without creating accounts with other services.
* interoperability: users' wallets follows them across applications.
This NIP doesn't deal with users' *receiving* money from someone else, it's just to keep state of the user's wallet.
# High-level flow
1. A user has a `kind:37375` event that represents a wallet.
2. A user has `kind:7375` events that represent the unspent proofs of the wallet. -- The proofs are encrypted with the user's private key.
3. A user has `kind:7376` events that represent the spending history of the wallet -- This history is for informational purposes only and is completely optional.
## Wallet Event
```jsonc
{
"kind": 37375,
"content": nip44_encrypt([
[ "balance", "100", "sat" ],
[ "privkey", "hexkey" ] // explained in NIP-61
]),
"tags": [
[ "d", "my-wallet" ],
[ "mint", "https://mint1" ],
[ "mint", "https://mint2" ],
[ "mint", "https://mint3" ],
[ "name", "my shitposting wallet" ],
[ "unit", "sat" ],
[ "description", "a wallet for my day-to-day shitposting" ],
[ "relay", "wss://relay1" ],
[ "relay", "wss://relay2" ],
]
}
```
The wallet event is a parameterized replaceable event `kind:37375`.
Tags:
* `d` - wallet ID.
* `mint` - Mint(s) this wallet uses -- there MUST be one or more mint tags.
* `relay` - Relays where the wallet and related events can be found. -- one ore more relays SHOULD be specified. If missing, clients should follow [[NIP-65]].
* `unit` - Base unit of the wallet (e.g. "sat", "usd", etc).
* `name` - Optional human-readable name for the wallet.
* `description` - Optional human-readable description of the wallet.
* `balance` - Optional best-effort balance of the wallet that can serve as a placeholder while an accurate balance is computed from fetching all unspent proofs.
* `privkey` - Private key used to unlock P2PK ecash. MUST be stored encrypted in the `.content` field. **This is a different private key exclusively used for the wallet, not associated in any way to the user's nostr private key** -- This is only used when receiving funds from others, described in NIP-61.
Any tag, other than the `d` tag, can be [[NIP-44]] encrypted into the `.content` field.
### Deleting a wallet event
Due to PRE being hard to delete, if a user wants to delete a wallet, they should empty the event and keep just the `d` identifier and add a `deleted` tag.
## Token Event
Token events are used to record the unspent proofs that come from the mint.
There can be multiple `kind:7375` events for the same mint, and multiple proofs inside each `kind:7375` event.
```jsonc
{
"kind": 7375,
"content": nip44_encrypt({
"mint": "https://stablenut.umint.cash",
"proofs": [
{
"id": "005c2502034d4f12",
"amount": 1,
"secret": "z+zyxAVLRqN9lEjxuNPSyRJzEstbl69Jc1vtimvtkPg=",
"C": "0241d98a8197ef238a192d47edf191a9de78b657308937b4f7dd0aa53beae72c46"
}
]
}),
"tags": [
[ "a", "37375:<pubkey>:my-wallet" ]
]
}
```
`.content` is a [[NIP-44]] encrypted payload storing the mint and the unencoded proofs.
* `a` an optional tag linking the token to a specific wallet.
### Spending proofs
When one or more proofs of a token are spent, the token event should be [[NIP-09]]-deleted and, if some proofs are unspent from the same token event, a new token event should be created rolling over the unspent proofs and adding any change outputs to the new token event.
## Spending History Event
Clients SHOULD publish `kind:7376` events to create a transaction history when their balance changes.
```jsonc
{
"kind": 7376,
"content": nip44_encrypt([
[ "direction", "in" ], // in = received, out = sent
[ "amount", "1", "sat" ],
[ "e", "<event-id-of-spent-token>", "<relay-hint>", "created" ],
]),
"tags": [
[ "a", "37375:<pubkey>:my-wallet" ],
]
}
```
* `direction` - The direction of the transaction; `in` for received funds, `out` for sent funds.
* `a` - The wallet the transaction is related to.
Clients MUST add `e` tags to create references of destroyed and created token events along with the marker of the meaning of the tag:
* `created` - A new token event was created.
* `destroyed` - A token event was destroyed.
* `redeemed` - A [[NIP-61]] nutzap was redeemed.
All tags can be [[NIP-44]] encrypted. Clients SHOULD leave `e` tags with a `redeemed` marker unencrypted.
Multiple `e` tags can be added to a `kind:7376` event.
# Flow
A client that wants to check for user's wallets information starts by fetching `kind:10019` events from the user's relays, if no event is found, it should fall back to using the user's [[NIP-65]] relays.
## Fetch wallet and token list
From those relays, the client should fetch wallet and token events.
`"kinds": [37375, 7375], "authors": ["<my-pubkey>"]`
## Fetch proofs
While the client is fetching (and perhaps validating) proofs it can use the optional `balance` tag of the wallet event to display a estimate of the balance of the wallet.
## Spending token
If Alice spends 4 sats from this token event
```jsonconc
{
"kind": 7375,
"id": "event-id-1",
"content": nip44_encrypt({
"mint": "https://stablenut.umint.cash",
"proofs": [
{ "id": "1", "amount": 1 },
{ "id": "2", "amount": 2 },
{ "id": "3", "amount": 4 },
{ "id": "4", "amount": 8 },
]
}),
"tags": [
[ "a", "37375:<pubkey>:my-wallet" ]
]
}
```
Her client:
* MUST roll over the unspent proofs:
```jsonconc
{
"kind": 7375,
"id": "event-id-2",
"content": nip44_encrypt({
"mint": "https://stablenut.umint.cash",
"proofs": [
{ "id": "1", "amount": 1 },
{ "id": "2", "amount": 2 },
{ "id": "4", "amount": 8 },
]
}),
"tags": [
[ "a", "37375:<pubkey>:my-wallet" ]
]
}
```
* MUST delete event `event-id-1`
* SHOULD create a `kind:7376` event to record the spend
```jsonconc
{
"kind": 7376,
"content": nip44_encrypt([
[ "direction", "out" ],
[ "amount", "4", "sats" ],
[ "e", "<event-id-1>", "<relay-hint>", "destroyed" ],
[ "e", "<event-id-2>", "<relay-hint>", "created" ],
]),
"tags": [
[ "a", "37375:<pubkey>:my-wallet" ],
]
}
```
## Redeeming a quote (optional)
When creating a quote at a mint, an event can be used to keep the state of the quote ID, which will be used to check when the quote has been paid. These events should be created with an expiration tag [[NIP-40]] matching the expiration of the bolt11 received from the mint; this signals to relays when they can safely discard these events.
Application developers are encouraged to use local state when possible and only publish this event when it makes sense in the context of their application.
```jsonc
{
"kind": 7374,
"content": nip44_encrypt("quote-id"),
"tags": [
[ "expiration", "<expiration-timestamp>" ],
[ "mint", "<mint-url>" ],
[ "a", "37375:<pubkey>:my-wallet" ]
]
}
```
## Appendix 1: Validating proofs
Clients can optionally validate proofs to make sure they are not working from an old state; this logic is left up to particular implementations to decide when and why to do it, but if some proofs are checked and deemed to have been spent, the client should delete the token and roll over any unspent proof.

132
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@@ -0,0 +1,132 @@
# NIP-61:
## Nut Zaps
A Nut Zap is a P2PK cashu token where the payment itself is the receipt.
# High-level flow
Alice wants to nutzap 1 sat to Bob because of an event `event-id-1` she liked.
## Alice nutzaps Bob
1. Alice fetches event `kind:10019` from Bob to see the mints Bob trusts.
2. She mints a token at that mint (or swaps some tokens she already had in that mint) p2pk-locked to the pubkey Bob has listed in his `kind:10019`.
3. She publishes a `kind:9321` event to the relays Bob indicated with the proofs she minted.
## Bob receives the nutzap
1. At some point, Bob's client fetches `kind:9321` events p-tagging him from his relays.
2. Bob's client swaps the token into his wallet.
# Nutzap informational event
```jsonc
{
"kind": 10019,
"tags": [
[ "relay", "wss://relay1" ],
[ "relay", "wss://relay2" ],
[ "mint", "https://mint1", "usd", "sat" ],
[ "mint", "https://mint2", "sat" ],
[ "pubkey", "<p2pk-pubkey>" ]
]
}
```
`kind:10019` is an event that is useful for others to know how to send money to the user.
* `relay` - Relays where the user will be reading token events from. If a user wants to send money to the user, they should write to these relays.
* `mint` - Mints the user is explicitly agreeing to use to receive funds on. Clients SHOULD not send money on mints not listed here or risk burning their money. Additional markers can be used to list the supported base units of the mint.
* `pubkey` - Pubkey that SHOULD be used to P2PK-lock receiving nutzaps. If not present, clients SHOULD use the pubkey of the recipient. This is explained in Appendix 1.
## Nutzap event
Event `kind:9321` is a nutzap event published by the sender, p-tagging the recipient. The outputs are P2PK-locked to the pubkey the recipient indicated in their `kind:10019` event or to the recipient pubkey if the `kind:10019` event doesn't have a explicit pubkey.
Clients MUST prefix the pubkey they p2pk-lock with `"02"` (for nostr<>cashu pubkey compatibility).
```jsonc
{
kind: 9321,
content: "Thanks for this great idea.",
pubkey: "sender-pubkey",
tags: [
[ "amount", "1" ],
[ "unit", "sat" ],
[ "proof", "{\"amount\":1,\"C\":\"02277c66191736eb72fce9d975d08e3191f8f96afb73ab1eec37e4465683066d3f\",\"id\":\"000a93d6f8a1d2c4\",\"secret\":\"[\\\"P2PK\\\",{\\\"nonce\\\":\\\"b00bdd0467b0090a25bdf2d2f0d45ac4e355c482c1418350f273a04fedaaee83\\\",\\\"data\\\":\\\"02eaee8939e3565e48cc62967e2fde9d8e2a4b3ec0081f29eceff5c64ef10ac1ed\\\"}]\"}" ],
[ "u", "https://stablenut.umint.cash", ],
[ "e", "<zapped-event-id>", "<relay-hint>" ],
[ "p", "e9fbced3a42dcf551486650cc752ab354347dd413b307484e4fd1818ab53f991" ], // recipient of nut zap
]
}
```
* `.content` is an optional comment for the nutzap
* `amount` is a shorthand for the combined amount of all outputs. -- Clients SHOULD validate that the sum of the amounts in the outputs matches.
* `unit` is the base unit of the amount.
* `proof` is one ore more proofs p2pk-locked to the pubkey the recipient specified in their `kind:10019` event.
* `u` is the mint the URL of the mint EXACTLY as specified by the recipient's `kind:10019`.
* `e` zero or one event that is being nutzapped.
* `p` exactly one pubkey, specifying the recipient of the nutzap.
WIP: Clients SHOULD embed a DLEQ proof in the nutzap event to make it possible to verify nutzaps without talking to the mint.
# Sending a nutzap
* The sender fetches the recipient's `kind:10019`.
* The sender mints/swaps ecash on one of the recipient's listed mints.
* The sender p2pk locks to the recipient's specified pubkey in their
# Receiving nutzaps
Clients should REQ for nut zaps:
* Filtering with `#u` for mints they expect to receive ecash from.
* this is to prevent even interacting with mints the user hasn't explicitly signaled.
* Filtering with `since` of the most recent `kind:7376` event the same user has created.
* this can be used as a marker of the nut zaps that have already been swaped by the user -- clients might choose to use other kinds of markers, including internal state -- this is just a guidance of one possible approach.
Clients MIGHT choose to use some kind of filtering (e.g. WoT) to ignore spam.
`{ "kinds": [9321], "#p": "my-pubkey", "#u": [ "<mint-1>", "<mint-2>"], "since": <latest-created_at-of-kind-7376> }`.
Upon receiving a new nut zap, the client should swap the tokens into a wallet the user controls, either a [[NIP-60]] wallet, their own LN wallet or anything else.
## Updating nutzap-redemption history
When claiming a token the client SHOULD create a `kind:7376` event and `e` tag the original nut zap event. This is to record that this token has already been claimed (and shouldn't be attempted again) and as signaling to the recipient that the ecash has been redeemed.
Multiple `kind:9321` events can be tagged in the same `kind:7376` event.
```jsonc
{
"kind": 7376,
"content": nip44_encrypt([
[ "direction", "in" ], // in = received, out = sent
[ "amount", "1", "sat" ],
[ "e", "<7375-event-id>", "relay-hint", "created" ] // new token event that was created
]),
"tags": [
[ "a", "37375:<pubkey>:my-wallet" ], // an optional wallet tag
[ "e", "<9321-event-id>", "relay-hint", "redeemed" ], // nutzap event that has been redeemed
[ "p", "sender-pubkey" ] // pubkey of the author of the 9321 event (nutzap sender)
]
}
```
Events that redeem a nutzap SHOULD be published to the sender's [[NIP-65]] relays.
## Verifying a Cashu Zap
* Clients SHOULD check that the receiving user has issued a `kind:10019` tagging the mint where the cashu has been minted.
* Clients SHOULD check that the token is locked to the pubkey the user has listed in their `kind:10019`.
## Final Considerations
1. Clients SHOULD guide their users to use NUT-11 (P2PK) compatible-mints in their `kind:10019` event to avoid receiving nut zaps anyone can spend
2. Clients SHOULD normalize and deduplicate mint URLs as described in NIP-65.
3. A nut zap MUST be sent to a mint the recipient has listed in their `kind:10019` event or to the NIP-65 relays of the recipient, failure to do so may result in the recipient donating the tokens to the mint since the recipient might never see the event.
## Appendix 1: Alternative P2PK pubkey
Clients might not have access to the user's private key (i.e. NIP-07, NIP-46 signing) and, as such, the private key to sign cashu spends might not be available, which would make spending the P2PK incoming nutzaps impossible.
For this scenarios clients can:
* add a `pubkey` tag to the `kind:10019` (indicating which pubkey senders should P2PK to)
* store the private key in the `kind:37375` event in the nip44-encrypted `content` field.
This is to avoid depending on NIP-07/46 adaptations to sign cashu payloads.

14
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@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ NIP-64
======
Chess (Portable Game Notation)
-----
------------------------------
`draft` `optional`
@@ -16,23 +16,23 @@ The `.content` of these notes is a string representing a [PGN-database][pgn_form
### Notes
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 64,
"content": "1. e4 *",
...
// other fields...
}
```
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 64,
"tags": [
["alt", "Fischer vs. Spassky in Belgrade on 1992-11-04 (F/S Return Match, Round 29)"],
...
// rest of tags...
],
"content": "[Event \"F/S Return Match\"]\n[Site \"Belgrade, Serbia JUG\"]\n[Date \"1992.11.04\"]\n[Round \"29\"]\n[White \"Fischer, Robert J.\"]\n[Black \"Spassky, Boris V.\"]\n[Result \"1/2-1/2\"]\n\n1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 {This opening is called the Ruy Lopez.} 3... a6\n4. Ba4 Nf6 5. O-O Be7 6. Re1 b5 7. Bb3 d6 8. c3 O-O 9. h3 Nb8 10. d4 Nbd7\n11. c4 c6 12. cxb5 axb5 13. Nc3 Bb7 14. Bg5 b4 15. Nb1 h6 16. Bh4 c5 17. dxe5\nNxe4 18. Bxe7 Qxe7 19. exd6 Qf6 20. Nbd2 Nxd6 21. Nc4 Nxc4 22. Bxc4 Nb6\n23. Ne5 Rae8 24. Bxf7+ Rxf7 25. Nxf7 Rxe1+ 26. Qxe1 Kxf7 27. Qe3 Qg5 28. Qxg5\nhxg5 29. b3 Ke6 30. a3 Kd6 31. axb4 cxb4 32. Ra5 Nd5 33. f3 Bc8 34. Kf2 Bf5\n35. Ra7 g6 36. Ra6+ Kc5 37. Ke1 Nf4 38. g3 Nxh3 39. Kd2 Kb5 40. Rd6 Kc5 41. Ra6\nNf2 42. g4 Bd3 43. Re6 1/2-1/2"
...
"content": "[Event \"F/S Return Match\"]\n[Site \"Belgrade, Serbia JUG\"]\n[Date \"1992.11.04\"]\n[Round \"29\"]\n[White \"Fischer, Robert J.\"]\n[Black \"Spassky, Boris V.\"]\n[Result \"1/2-1/2\"]\n\n1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 {This opening is called the Ruy Lopez.} 3... a6\n4. Ba4 Nf6 5. O-O Be7 6. Re1 b5 7. Bb3 d6 8. c3 O-O 9. h3 Nb8 10. d4 Nbd7\n11. c4 c6 12. cxb5 axb5 13. Nc3 Bb7 14. Bg5 b4 15. Nb1 h6 16. Bh4 c5 17. dxe5\nNxe4 18. Bxe7 Qxe7 19. exd6 Qf6 20. Nbd2 Nxd6 21. Nc4 Nxc4 22. Bxc4 Nb6\n23. Ne5 Rae8 24. Bxf7+ Rxf7 25. Nxf7 Rxe1+ 26. Qxe1 Kxf7 27. Qe3 Qg5 28. Qxg5\nhxg5 29. b3 Ke6 30. a3 Kd6 31. axb4 cxb4 32. Ra5 Nd5 33. f3 Bc8 34. Kf2 Bf5\n35. Ra7 g6 36. Ra6+ Kc5 37. Ke1 Nf4 38. g3 Nxh3 39. Kd2 Kb5 40. Rd6 Kc5 41. Ra6\nNf2 42. g4 Bd3 43. Re6 1/2-1/2",
// other fields...
}
```

8
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@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ The event MUST include a list of `r` tags with relay URIs and a `read` or `write
The `.content` is not used.
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 10002,
"tags": [
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ The `.content` is not used.
["r", "wss://nostr-relay.example.com", "read"]
],
"content": "",
...other fields
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -62,3 +62,7 @@ This NIP allows Clients to connect directly with the most up-to-date relay set f
5. If a relay signals support for this NIP in their [NIP-11](11.md) document that means they're willing to accept kind 10002 events from a broad range of users, not only their paying customers or whitelisted group.
6. Clients SHOULD deduplicate connections by normalizing relay URIs according to [RFC 3986](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc3986#section-6).
## Related articles
- [Outbox model](https://mikedilger.com/gossip-model/)
- [What is the Outbox Model?](https://habla.news/u/hodlbod@coracle.social/8YjqXm4SKY-TauwjOfLXS)

123
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@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ NIP-71
======
Video Events
---------------
------------
`draft` `optional`
@@ -16,25 +16,64 @@ There are two types of video events represented by different kinds: horizontal a
#### Format
The format uses a parameterized replaceable event kind `34235` for horizontal videos and `34236` for vertical videos.
The format uses an _addressable event_ kind `34235` for horizontal videos and `34236` for vertical videos.
The `.content` of these events is a summary or description on the video content.
The list of tags are as follows:
* `d` (required) universally unique identifier (UUID). Generated by the client creating the video event.
* `url` (required) the url to the video 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.
The primary source of video information is the `imeta` tags which is defined in [NIP-92](92.md)
Each `imeta` tag can be used to specify a variant of the video by the `dim` & `m` properties.
Example:
```json
[
["imeta",
"dim 1920x1080",
"url https://myvideo.com/1080/12345.mp4",
"x 3093509d1e0bc604ff60cb9286f4cd7c781553bc8991937befaacfdc28ec5cdc",
"m video/mp4",
"image https://myvideo.com/1080/12345.jpg",
"image https://myotherserver.com/1080/12345.jpg",
"fallback https://myotherserver.com/1080/12345.mp4",
"fallback https://andanotherserver.com/1080/12345.mp4",
"service nip96",
],
["imeta",
"dim 1280x720",
"url https://myvideo.com/720/12345.mp4",
"x e1d4f808dae475ed32fb23ce52ef8ac82e3cc760702fca10d62d382d2da3697d",
"m video/mp4",
"image https://myvideo.com/720/12345.jpg",
"image https://myotherserver.com/720/12345.jpg",
"fallback https://myotherserver.com/720/12345.mp4",
"fallback https://andanotherserver.com/720/12345.mp4",
"service nip96",
],
["imeta",
"dim 1280x720",
"url https://myvideo.com/720/12345.m3u8",
"x 704e720af2697f5d6a198ad377789d462054b6e8d790f8a3903afbc1e044014f",
"m application/x-mpegURL",
"image https://myvideo.com/720/12345.jpg",
"image https://myotherserver.com/720/12345.jpg",
"fallback https://myotherserver.com/720/12345.m3u8",
"fallback https://andanotherserver.com/720/12345.m3u8",
"service nip96",
],
]
```
Where `url` is the primary server url and `fallback` are other servers hosting the same file, both `url` and `fallback` should be weighted equally and clients are recommended to use any of the provided video urls.
The `image` tag contains a preview image (at the same resolution). Multiple `image` tags may be used to specify fallback copies in the same way `fallback` is used for `url`.
Additionally `service nip96` may be included to allow clients to search the authors NIP-96 server list to find the file using the hash.
### Other tags:
* `title` (required) title of the video
* `"published_at"`, for the timestamp in unix seconds (stringified) of the first time the video was published
* `x` containing the SHA-256 hexencoded string of the file.
* `size` (optional) size of file in bytes
* `dim` (optional) size of file in pixels in the form `<width>x<height>`
* `published_at`, for the timestamp in unix seconds (stringified) of the first time the video was published
* `duration` (optional) video duration in seconds
* `magnet` (optional) URI to magnet file
* `i` (optional) torrent infohash
* `text-track` (optional, repeated) link to WebVTT file for video, type of supplementary information (captions/subtitles/chapters/metadata), optional language code
* `thumb` (optional) url of thumbnail with same aspect ratio
* `image` (optional) url of preview image with same dimensions
* `content-warning` (optional) warning about content of NSFW video
* `alt` (optional) description for accessibility
* `segment` (optional, repeated) start timestamp in format `HH:MM:SS.sss`, end timestamp in format `HH:MM:SS.sss`, chapter/segment title, chapter thumbnail-url
@@ -42,7 +81,7 @@ The list of tags are as follows:
* `p` (optional, repeated) 32-bytes hex pubkey of a participant in the video, optional recommended relay URL
* `r` (optional, repeated) references / links to web pages
```json
```jsonc
{
"id": <32-bytes lowercase hex-encoded SHA-256 of the the serialized event data>,
"pubkey": <32-bytes lowercase hex-encoded public key of the event creator>,
@@ -53,19 +92,23 @@ The list of tags are as follows:
["d", "<UUID>"],
["title", "<title of video>"],
["thumb", "<thumbnail image for video>"],
["published_at", "<unix timestamp>"],
["alt", <description>],
// Video Data
["url",<string with URI of file>],
["m", <MIME type>],
["x",<Hash SHA-256>],
["size", <size of file in bytes>],
["imeta",
"dim 1920x1080",
"url https://myvideo.com/1080/12345.mp4",
"x 3093509d1e0bc604ff60cb9286f4cd7c781553bc8991937befaacfdc28ec5cdc",
"m video/mp4",
"image https://myvideo.com/1080/12345.jpg",
"image https://myotherserver.com/1080/12345.jpg",
"fallback https://myotherserver.com/1080/12345.mp4",
"fallback https://andanotherserver.com/1080/12345.mp4",
"service nip96",
],
["duration", <duration of video in seconds>],
["dim", <size of file in pixels>],
["magnet",<magnet URI> ],
["i",<torrent infohash>],
["text-track", "<encoded `kind 6000` event>", "<recommended relay urls>"],
["content-warning", "<reason>"],
["segment", <start>, <end>, "<title>", "<thumbnail URL>"],
@@ -83,36 +126,4 @@ The list of tags are as follows:
["r", "<url>"]
]
}
```
## Video View
A video event view is a response to a video event to track a user's view or progress viewing the video.
### Format
The format uses a parameterized replaceable event kind `34237`.
The `.content` of these events is optional and could be a free-form note that acts like a bookmark for the user.
The list of tags are as follows:
* `a` (required) reference tag to kind `34235` or `34236` video event being viewed
* `d` (required) same as `a` reference tag value
* `viewed` (optional, repeated) timestamp of the user's start time in seconds, timestamp of the user's end time in seconds
```json
{
"id": <32-bytes lowercase hex-encoded SHA-256 of the the serialized event data>,
"pubkey": <32-bytes lowercase hex-encoded public key of the event creator>,
"created_at": <Unix timestamp in seconds>,
"kind": 34237,
"content": "<note>",
"tags": [
["a", "<34235 | 34236>:<video event author pubkey>:<d-identifier of video event>", "<optional relay url>"],
["e", "<event-id", "<relay-url>"]
["d", "<34235 | 34236>:<video event author pubkey>:<d-identifier of video event>"],
["viewed", <start>, <end>],
]
}
```
```

6
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@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ The goal of this NIP is to enable public communities. It defines the replaceable
["relay", "<relay where to send and receive approvals>", "approvals"],
["relay", "<relay where to post requests to and fetch approvals from>"]
],
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ Any Nostr event can be posted to a community. Clients MUST add one or more commu
["a", "34550:<community event author pubkey>:<community-d-identifier>", "<optional-relay-url>"],
],
"content": "hello world",
// ...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ Moderators MAY request deletion of their approval of a post at any time using [N
["k", "<post-request-kind>"]
],
"content": "<the full approved event, JSON-encoded>",
// ...
// other fields...
}
```

26
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@@ -2,21 +2,33 @@ NIP-73
======
External Content IDs
-------------------------
--------------------
`draft` `optional`
There are certain established global content identifiers that would be useful to reference in nostr events so that clients can query all events assosiated with these ids.
There are certain established global content identifiers such as [Book ISBNs](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISBN), [Podcast GUIDs](https://podcastnamespace.org/tag/guid), and [Movie ISANs](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Standard_Audiovisual_Number) that are useful to reference in nostr events so that clients can query all the events assosiated with these ids.
- Book [ISBNs](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISBN)
- Podcast [GUIDs](https://podcastnamespace.org/tag/guid)
- Movie [ISANs](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Standard_Audiovisual_Number)
Since the `i` tag is already used for similar references in kind-0 metadata events it makes sense to use it for these content ids as well.
`i` tags are used for referencing these external content ids, with `k` tags representing the external content id kind so that clients can query all the events for a specific kind.
## Supported IDs
| Type | `i` tag | `k` tag |
|- | - | - |
| URLs | "`<URL, normalized, no fragment>`" | "`<scheme-host, normalized>`" |
| Hashtags | "#`<topic, lowercase>`" | "#" |
| Geohashes| "geo:`<geohash, lowercase>`" | "geo" |
| Books | "isbn:`<id, without hyphens>`" | "isbn" |
| Podcast Feeds | "podcast:guid:`<guid>`" | "podcast:guid" |
| Podcast Episodes | "podcast:item:guid:`<guid>`" | "podcast:item:guid" |
| Podcast Publishers | "podcast:publisher:guid:`<guid>`" | "podcast:publisher:guid" |
| Movies | "isan:`<id, without version part>`" | "isan" |
| Papers | "doi:`<id, lowercase>`" | "doi" |
---
## Examples
### Books:
- Book ISBN: `["i", "isbn:9780765382030"]` - https://isbnsearch.org/isbn/9780765382030

22
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@@ -21,15 +21,16 @@ The following tags are defined as REQUIRED.
Example event:
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 9041,
"tags": [
["relays", "wss://alicerelay.example.com", "wss://bobrelay.example.com", ...],
["relays", "wss://alicerelay.example.com", "wss://bobrelay.example.com", /*...*/],
["amount", "210000"],
],
"content": "Nostrasia travel expenses",
...
// other fields...
}
```
The following tags are OPTIONAL.
@@ -38,18 +39,18 @@ The following tags are OPTIONAL.
- `image` - an image for the goal
- `summary` - a brief description
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 9041,
"tags": [
["relays", "wss://alicerelay.example.com", "wss://bobrelay.example.com", ...],
["relays", "wss://alicerelay.example.com", "wss://bobrelay.example.com", /*...*/],
["amount", "210000"],
["closed_at", "<unix timestamp in seconds>"],
["image", "<image URL>"],
["summary", "<description of the goal>"],
],
"content": "Nostrasia travel expenses",
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -59,15 +60,14 @@ The goal MAY include multiple beneficiary pubkeys by specifying [`zap` tags](57.
Addressable events can link to a goal by using a `goal` tag specifying the event id and an optional relay hint.
```json
```jsonc
{
...
"kind": 3xxxx,
"tags": [
...
["goal", "<event id>", "<Relay URL (optional)>"],
// rest of tags...
],
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -77,7 +77,7 @@ Clients MAY display funding goals on user profiles.
When zapping a goal event, clients MUST include the relays in the `relays` tag of the goal event in the zap request `relays` tag.
When zapping a parameterized replaceable event with a `goal` tag, clients SHOULD tag the goal event id in the `e` tag of the zap request.
When zapping an addressable event with a `goal` tag, clients SHOULD tag the goal event id in the `e` tag of the zap request.
## Use cases

4
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@@ -26,14 +26,14 @@ useful when highlighting non-nostr content for which the client might be able to
(e.g. prompting the user or reading a `<meta name="nostr:nprofile1..." />` tag on the document). A role MAY be included as the
last value of the tag.
```json
```jsonc
{
"tags": [
["p", "<pubkey-hex>", "<relay-url>", "author"],
["p", "<pubkey-hex>", "<relay-url>", "author"],
["p", "<pubkey-hex>", "<relay-url>", "editor"]
],
...
// other fields...
}
```

22
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@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ There are three actors to this workflow:
## Events
### Recommendation event
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 31989,
"pubkey": <recommender-user-pubkey>,
@@ -35,7 +35,8 @@ There are three actors to this workflow:
["d", <supported-event-kind>],
["a", "31990:app1-pubkey:<d-identifier>", "wss://relay1", "ios"],
["a", "31990:app2-pubkey:<d-identifier>", "wss://relay2", "web"]
]
],
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -47,7 +48,7 @@ The second value of the tag SHOULD be a relay hint.
The third value of the tag SHOULD be the platform where this recommendation might apply.
## Handler information
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 31990,
"pubkey": "<application-pubkey>",
@@ -59,7 +60,8 @@ The third value of the tag SHOULD be the platform where this recommendation migh
["web", "https://..../p/<bech32>", "nprofile"],
["web", "https://..../e/<bech32>"],
["ios", ".../<bech32>"]
]
],
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -77,13 +79,13 @@ A tag without a second value in the array SHOULD be considered a generic handler
# Client tag
When publishing events, clients MAY include a `client` tag. Identifying the client that published the note. This tag is a tuple of `name`, `address` identifying a handler event and, a relay `hint` for finding the handler event. This has privacy implications for users, so clients SHOULD allow users to opt-out of using this tag.
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
["client", "My Client", "31990:app1-pubkey:<d-identifier>", "wss://relay1"]
]
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -99,14 +101,14 @@ The client MIGHT query for the user's and the user's follows handler.
### User A recommends a `kind:31337`-handler
User A might be a user of Zapstr, a `kind:31337`-centric client (tracks). Using Zapstr, user A publishes an event recommending Zapstr as a `kind:31337`-handler.
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 31989,
"tags": [
["d", "31337"],
["a", "31990:1743058db7078661b94aaf4286429d97ee5257d14a86d6bfa54cb0482b876fb0:abcd", <relay-url>, "web"]
],
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -115,7 +117,7 @@ User B might see in their timeline an event referring to a `kind:31337` event (e
User B's client, not knowing how to handle a `kind:31337` might display the event using its `alt` tag (as described in NIP-31). When the user clicks on the event, the application queries for a handler for this `kind`:
```json
```
["REQ", <id>, { "kinds": [31989], "#d": ["31337"], "authors": [<user>, <users-contact-list>] }]
```
@@ -126,6 +128,6 @@ User B's client sees the application's `kind:31990` which includes the informati
### Alternative query bypassing `kind:31989`
Alternatively, users might choose to query directly for `kind:31990` for an event kind. Clients SHOULD be careful doing this and use spam-prevention mechanisms or querying high-quality restricted relays to avoid directing users to malicious handlers.
```json
```
["REQ", <id>, { "kinds": [31990], "#k": [<desired-event-kind>], "authors": [...] }]
```

26
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@@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ There are two actors in the workflow described in this NIP:
## Job request (`kind:5000-5999`)
A request to process data, published by a customer. This event signals that a customer is interested in receiving the result of some kind of compute.
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 5xxx, // kind in 5000-5999 range
"content": "",
@@ -46,7 +46,8 @@ A request to process data, published by a customer. This event signals that a cu
[ "relays", "wss://..." ],
[ "bid", "<msat-amount>" ],
[ "t", "bitcoin" ]
]
],
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -81,19 +82,18 @@ If the user wants to keep the input parameters a secret, they can encrypt the `i
["param", "top-p", "0.7"],
["param", "frequency_penalty", "1"]
]
```
This param data will be encrypted and added to the `content` field and `p` tag should be present
```json
```jsonc
{
"content": "BE2Y4xvS6HIY7TozIgbEl3sAHkdZoXyLRRkZv4fLPh3R7LtviLKAJM5qpkC7D6VtMbgIt4iNcMpLtpo...",
"tags": [
["p", "04f74530a6ede6b24731b976b8e78fb449ea61f40ff10e3d869a3030c4edc91f"],
["encrypted"]
],
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -102,7 +102,7 @@ This param data will be encrypted and added to the `content` field and `p` tag s
Service providers publish job results, providing the output of the job result. They should tag the original job request event id as well as the customer's pubkey.
```json
```jsonc
{
"pubkey": "<service-provider pubkey>",
"content": "<payload>",
@@ -114,7 +114,7 @@ Service providers publish job results, providing the output of the job result. T
["p", "<customer's-pubkey>"],
["amount", "requested-payment-amount", "<optional-bolt11>"]
],
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -127,7 +127,7 @@ Service providers publish job results, providing the output of the job result. T
If the request has encrypted params, then output should be encrypted and placed in `content` field. If the output is encrypted, then avoid including `i` tag with input-data as clear text.
Add a tag encrypted to mark the output content as `encrypted`
```json
```jsonc
{
"pubkey": "<service-provider pubkey>",
"content": "<encrypted payload>",
@@ -139,7 +139,7 @@ Add a tag encrypted to mark the output content as `encrypted`
["amount", "requested-payment-amount", "<optional-bolt11>"],
["encrypted"]
],
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -147,7 +147,7 @@ Add a tag encrypted to mark the output content as `encrypted`
Service providers can give feedback about a job back to the customer.
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 7000,
"content": "<empty-or-payload>",
@@ -157,7 +157,7 @@ Service providers can give feedback about a job back to the customer.
["e", "<job-request-id>", "<relay-hint>"],
["p", "<customer's-pubkey>"],
],
...
// other fields...
}
```
@@ -211,7 +211,7 @@ This gives a higher level of flexibility to service providers (which sophisticat
# Appendix 2: Service provider discoverability
Service Providers MAY use NIP-89 announcements to advertise their support for job kinds:
```js
```jsonc
{
"kind": 31990,
"pubkey": "<pubkey>",
@@ -223,7 +223,7 @@ Service Providers MAY use NIP-89 announcements to advertise their support for jo
["k", "5005"], // e.g. translation
["t", "bitcoin"] // e.g. optionally advertises it specializes in bitcoin audio transcription that won't confuse "Drivechains" with "Ridechains"
],
...
// other fields...
}
```

17
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@@ -26,27 +26,28 @@ This NIP specifies the use of the `1063` event type, having in `content` a descr
* `summary` (optional) text excerpt
* `alt` (optional) description for accessibility
* `fallback` (optional) zero or more fallback file sources in case `url` fails
* `service` (optional) service type which is serving the file (eg. [NIP-96](96.md))
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 1063,
"tags": [
["url",<string with URI of file>],
["m", <MIME type>],
["x",<Hash SHA-256>],
["ox",<Hash SHA-256>],
["x", <Hash SHA-256>],
["ox", <Hash SHA-256>],
["size", <size of file in bytes>],
["dim", <size of file in pixels>],
["magnet",<magnet URI> ],
["i",<torrent infohash>],
["magnet", <magnet URI> ],
["i", <torrent infohash>],
["blurhash", <value>],
["thumb", <string with thumbnail URI>],
["image", <string with preview URI>],
["thumb", <string with thumbnail URI>, <Hash SHA-256>],
["image", <string with preview URI>, <Hash SHA-256>],
["summary", <excerpt>],
["alt", <description>]
],
"content": "<caption>",
...
// other fields...
}
```

59
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@@ -1,6 +1,8 @@
# NIP-96
NIP-96
======
## HTTP File Storage Integration
HTTP File Storage Integration
-----------------------------
`draft` `optional`
@@ -17,7 +19,7 @@ will not have to learn anything about nostr relays.
File storage servers wishing to be accessible by nostr users should opt-in by making available an https route at `/.well-known/nostr/nip96.json` with `api_url`:
```js
```jsonc
{
// Required
// File upload and deletion are served from this url
@@ -57,7 +59,7 @@ File storage servers wishing to be accessible by nostr users should opt-in by ma
"file_expiration": [14, 90],
"media_transformations": {
"image": [
'resizing'
"resizing"
]
}
}
@@ -125,14 +127,14 @@ The `server` MUST link the user's `pubkey` string as the owner of the file so to
The upload response is a json object as follows:
```js
```jsonc
{
// "success" if successful or "error" if not
status: "success",
"status": "success",
// Free text success, failure or info message
message: "Upload successful.",
"message": "Upload successful.",
// Optional. See "Delayed Processing" section
processing_url: "...",
"processing_url": "...",
// This uses the NIP-94 event format but DO NOT need
// to fill some fields like "id", "pubkey", "created_at" and "sig"
//
@@ -141,9 +143,9 @@ The upload response is a json object as follows:
// and, optionally, all file metadata the server wants to make available
//
// nip94_event field is absent if unsuccessful upload
nip94_event: {
"nip94_event": {
// Required tags: "url" and "ox"
tags: [
"tags": [
// Can be same from /.well-known/nostr/nip96.json's "download_url" field
// (or "api_url" field if "download_url" is absent or empty) with appended
// original file hash.
@@ -164,12 +166,12 @@ The upload response is a json object as follows:
// The server can but does not need to store this value.
["x", "543244319525d9d08dd69cb716a18158a249b7b3b3ec4bbde5435543acb34443"],
// Optional. Recommended for helping clients to easily know file type before downloading it.
["m", "image/png"]
["m", "image/png"],
// Optional. Recommended for helping clients to reserve an adequate UI space to show the file before downloading it.
["dim", "800x600"]
// ... other optional NIP-94 tags
],
content: ""
"content": ""
},
// ... other custom fields (please consider adding them to this NIP or to NIP-94 tags)
}
@@ -200,12 +202,12 @@ the file processing is done.
If the processing isn't done, the server should reply at the `processing_url` url with **200 OK** and the following JSON:
```
```jsonc
{
// It should be "processing". If "error" it would mean the processing failed.
status: "processing",
message: "Processing. Please check again later for updated status.",
percentage: 15 // Processing percentage. An integer between 0 and 100.
"status": "processing",
"message": "Processing. Please check again later for updated status.",
"percentage": 15 // Processing percentage. An integer between 0 and 100.
}
```
@@ -268,10 +270,10 @@ in the same file hash).
The successful response is a 200 OK one with just basic JSON fields:
```
```json
{
status: "success",
message: "File deleted."
"status": "success",
"message": "File deleted."
}
```
@@ -285,7 +287,7 @@ Returns a list of files linked to the authenticated users pubkey.
Example Response:
```js
```jsonc
{
"count": 1, // server page size, eg. max(1, min(server_max_page_size, arg_count))
"total": 1, // total number of files
@@ -293,17 +295,16 @@ Example Response:
"files": [
{
"tags": [
["ox": "719171db19525d9d08dd69cb716a18158a249b7b3b3ec4bbdec5698dca104b7b"],
["x": "5d2899290e0e69bcd809949ee516a4a1597205390878f780c098707a7f18e3df"],
["ox", "719171db19525d9d08dd69cb716a18158a249b7b3b3ec4bbdec5698dca104b7b"],
["x", "5d2899290e0e69bcd809949ee516a4a1597205390878f780c098707a7f18e3df"],
["size", "123456"],
["alt", "a meme that makes you laugh"],
["expiration", "1715691139"],
// ...other metadata
]
],
"content": "haha funny meme", // caption
"created_at": 1715691130 // upload timestamp
},
...
}
]
}
```
@@ -322,14 +323,14 @@ Note: HTTP File Storage Server developers may skip this section. This is meant f
A File Server Preference event is a kind 10096 replaceable event meant to select one or more servers the user wants
to upload files to. Servers are listed as `server` tags:
```js
{
// ...
```json
{.
"kind": 10096,
"content": "",
"tags": [
["server", "https://file.server.one"],
["server", "https://file.server.two"]
]
],
// other fields...
}
```

4
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@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ The `.pubkey` field of these events are treated as the party creating the listin
### Metadata
- For "tags"/"hashtags" (i.e. categories or keywords of relevance for the listing) the `"t"` event tag should be used, as per [NIP-12](12.md).
- For "tags"/"hashtags" (i.e. categories or keywords of relevance for the listing) the `"t"` event tag should be used.
- For images, whether included in the markdown content or not, clients SHOULD use `image` tags as described in [NIP-58](58.md). This allows clients to display images in carousel format more easily.
The following tags, used for structured metadata, are standardized and SHOULD be included. Other tags may be added as necessary.
@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ Other standard tags that might be useful.
## Example Event
```json
```jsonc
{
"kind": 30402,
"created_at": 1675642635,

View File

@@ -5,6 +5,9 @@ reverse chronological order.
| Date | Commit | NIP | Change |
| ----------- | --------- | -------- | ------ |
| 2024-10-15 | [1cda2dcc](https://github.com/nostr-protocol/nips/commit/1cda2dcc) | [NIP-71](71.md) | some tags were replaced with `imeta` tag |
| 2024-10-15 | [1cda2dcc](https://github.com/nostr-protocol/nips/commit/1cda2dcc) | [NIP-71](71.md) | `kind: 34237` was dropped |
| 2024-10-07 | [7bb8997b](https://github.com/nostr-protocol/nips/commit/7bb8997b) | [NIP-55](55.md) | some fields and passing data were changed |
| 2024-08-18 | [3aff37bd](https://github.com/nostr-protocol/nips/commit/3aff37bd) | [NIP-54](54.md) | content should be Asciidoc |
| 2024-07-31 | [3ea2f1a4](https://github.com/nostr-protocol/nips/commit/3ea2f1a4) | [NIP-45](45.md) | [444ad28d](https://github.com/nostr-protocol/nips/commit/444ad28d) was reverted |
| 2024-07-30 | [444ad28d](https://github.com/nostr-protocol/nips/commit/444ad28d) | [NIP-45](45.md) | NIP-45 was deprecated |

127
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@@ -73,6 +73,8 @@ They exist to document what may be implemented by [Nostr](https://github.com/nos
- [NIP-57: Lightning Zaps](57.md)
- [NIP-58: Badges](58.md)
- [NIP-59: Gift Wrap](59.md)
- [NIP-60: Cashu Wallet](60.md)
- [NIP-61: Nutzaps](61.md)
- [NIP-64: Chess (PGN)](64.md)
- [NIP-65: Relay List Metadata](65.md)
- [NIP-70: Protected Events](70.md)
@@ -131,6 +133,8 @@ They exist to document what may be implemented by [Nostr](https://github.com/nos
| `1971` | Problem Tracker | [nostrocket][nostrocket] |
| `1984` | Reporting | [56](56.md) |
| `1985` | Label | [32](32.md) |
| `1986` | Relay reviews | |
| `1987` | AI Embeddings / Vector lists | [NKBIP-02] |
| `2003` | Torrent | [35](35.md) |
| `2004` | Torrent Comment | [35](35.md) |
| `2022` | Coinjoin Pool | [joinstr][joinstr] |
@@ -138,8 +142,13 @@ They exist to document what may be implemented by [Nostr](https://github.com/nos
| `5000`-`5999` | Job Request | [90](90.md) |
| `6000`-`6999` | Job Result | [90](90.md) |
| `7000` | Job Feedback | [90](90.md) |
| `7374` | Reserved Cashu Wallet Tokens | [60](60.md) |
| `7375` | Cashu Wallet Tokens | [60](60.md) |
| `7376` | Cashu Wallet History | [60](60.md) |
| `9000`-`9030` | Group Control Events | [29](29.md) |
| `9041` | Zap Goal | [75](75.md) |
| `9321` | Nutzap | [61](61.md) |
| `9467` | Tidal login | [Tidal-nostr] |
| `9734` | Zap Request | [57](57.md) |
| `9735` | Zap | [57](57.md) |
| `9802` | Highlights | [84](84.md) |
@@ -153,8 +162,10 @@ They exist to document what may be implemented by [Nostr](https://github.com/nos
| `10007` | Search relays list | [51](51.md) |
| `10009` | User groups | [51](51.md), [29](29.md) |
| `10015` | Interests list | [51](51.md) |
| `10019` | Nutzap Mint Recommendation | [61](61.md) |
| `10030` | User emoji list | [51](51.md) |
| `10050` | Relay list to receive DMs | [51](51.md), [17](17.md) |
| `10063` | User server list | [Blossom][blossom] |
| `10096` | File storage server list | [96](96.md) |
| `13194` | Wallet Info | [47](47.md) |
| `21000` | Lightning Pub RPC | [Lightning.Pub][lnpub] |
@@ -162,6 +173,7 @@ They exist to document what may be implemented by [Nostr](https://github.com/nos
| `23194` | Wallet Request | [47](47.md) |
| `23195` | Wallet Response | [47](47.md) |
| `24133` | Nostr Connect | [46](46.md) |
| `24242` | Blobs stored on mediaservers | [Blossom][blossom] |
| `27235` | HTTP Auth | [98](98.md) |
| `30000` | Follow sets | [51](51.md) |
| `30001` | Generic lists | [51](51.md) |
@@ -169,6 +181,7 @@ They exist to document what may be implemented by [Nostr](https://github.com/nos
| `30003` | Bookmark sets | [51](51.md) |
| `30004` | Curation sets | [51](51.md) |
| `30005` | Video sets | [51](51.md) |
| `30007` | Kind mute sets | [51](51.md) |
| `30008` | Profile Badges | [58](58.md) |
| `30009` | Badge Definition | [58](58.md) |
| `30015` | Interest sets | [51](51.md) |
@@ -179,16 +192,20 @@ They exist to document what may be implemented by [Nostr](https://github.com/nos
| `30023` | Long-form Content | [23](23.md) |
| `30024` | Draft Long-form Content | [23](23.md) |
| `30030` | Emoji sets | [51](51.md) |
| `30040` | Modular Article Header | [NKBIP-01] |
| `30041` | Modular Article Content | [NKBIP-01] |
| `30063` | Release artifact sets | [51](51.md) |
| `30078` | Application-specific Data | [78](78.md) |
| `30311` | Live Event | [53](53.md) |
| `30315` | User Statuses | [38](38.md) |
| `30388` | Slide Set | [Corny Chat][cornychat-slideset] |
| `30402` | Classified Listing | [99](99.md) |
| `30403` | Draft Classified Listing | [99](99.md) |
| `30617` | Repository announcements | [34](34.md) |
| `30618` | Repository state announcements | [34](34.md) |
| `30818` | Wiki article | [54](54.md) |
| `30819` | Redirects | [54](54.md) |
| `31388` | Link Set | [Corny Chat][cornychat-linkset] |
| `31890` | Feed | [NUD: Custom Feeds][NUD: Custom Feeds] |
| `31922` | Date-Based Calendar Event | [52](52.md) |
| `31923` | Time-Based Calendar Event | [52](52.md) |
@@ -198,14 +215,20 @@ They exist to document what may be implemented by [Nostr](https://github.com/nos
| `31990` | Handler information | [89](89.md) |
| `34235` | Video Event | [71](71.md) |
| `34236` | Short-form Portrait Video Event | [71](71.md) |
| `34237` | Video View Event | [71](71.md) |
| `34550` | Community Definition | [72](72.md) |
| `37375` | Cashu Wallet Event | [60](60.md) |
| `39000-9` | Group metadata events | [29](29.md) |
[NUD: Custom Feeds]: https://wikifreedia.xyz/cip-01/97c70a44366a6535c1
[NUD: Custom Feeds]: https://wikifreedia.xyz/cip-01/
[nostrocket]: https://github.com/nostrocket/NIPS/blob/main/Problems.md
[lnpub]: https://github.com/shocknet/Lightning.Pub/blob/master/proto/autogenerated/client.md
[cornychat-slideset]: https://cornychat.com/datatypes#kind30388slideset
[cornychat-linkset]: https://cornychat.com/datatypes#kind31388linkset
[joinstr]: https://gitlab.com/1440000bytes/joinstr/-/blob/main/NIP.md
[NKBIP-01]: https://wikistr.com/nkbip-01
[NKBIP-02]: https://wikistr.com/nkbip-02
[blossom]: https://github.com/hzrd149/blossom
[Tidal-nostr]: https://wikistr.com/tidal-nostr
## Message types
@@ -233,56 +256,56 @@ They exist to document what may be implemented by [Nostr](https://github.com/nos
## Standardized Tags
| name | value | other parameters | NIP |
| ----------------- | ------------------------------------ | ------------------------------- | ------------------------------------- |
| `e` | event id (hex) | relay URL, marker, pubkey (hex) | [01](01.md), [10](10.md) |
| `p` | pubkey (hex) | relay URL, petname | [01](01.md), [02](02.md) |
| `a` | coordinates to an event | relay URL | [01](01.md) |
| `d` | identifier | -- | [01](01.md) |
| `-` | -- | -- | [70](70.md) |
| `g` | geohash | -- | [52](52.md) |
| `h` | group id | -- | [29](29.md) |
| `i` | external identity | proof, url hint | [39](39.md), [73](73.md) |
| `k` | kind number (string) | -- | [18](18.md), [25](25.md), [72](72.md) |
| `l` | label, label namespace | -- | [32](32.md) |
| `L` | label namespace | -- | [32](32.md) |
| `m` | MIME type | -- | [94](94.md) |
| `q` | event id (hex) | relay URL | [18](18.md) |
| `r` | a reference (URL, etc) | -- | [24](24.md), [25](25.md) |
| `r` | relay url | marker | [65](65.md) |
| `t` | hashtag | -- | [24](24.md) |
| `alt` | summary | -- | [31](31.md) |
| `amount` | millisatoshis, stringified | -- | [57](57.md) |
| `bolt11` | `bolt11` invoice | -- | [57](57.md) |
| `challenge` | challenge string | -- | [42](42.md) |
| `client` | name, address | relay URL | [89](89.md) |
| `clone` | git clone URL | -- | [34](34.md) |
| `content-warning` | reason | -- | [36](36.md) |
| `delegation` | pubkey, conditions, delegation token | -- | [26](26.md) |
| `description` | description | -- | [34](34.md), [57](57.md), [58](58.md) |
| `emoji` | shortcode, image URL | -- | [30](30.md) |
| `encrypted` | -- | -- | [90](90.md) |
| `expiration` | unix timestamp (string) | -- | [40](40.md) |
| `goal` | event id (hex) | relay URL | [75](75.md) |
| `image` | image URL | dimensions in pixels | [23](23.md), [52](52.md), [58](58.md) |
| `imeta` | inline metadata | -- | [92](92.md) |
| `lnurl` | `bech32` encoded `lnurl` | -- | [57](57.md) |
| `location` | location string | -- | [52](52.md), [99](99.md) |
| `name` | name | -- | [34](34.md), [58](58.md), [72](72.md) |
| `nonce` | random | difficulty | [13](13.md) |
| `preimage` | hash of `bolt11` invoice | -- | [57](57.md) |
| `price` | price | currency, frequency | [99](99.md) |
| `proxy` | external ID | protocol | [48](48.md) |
| `published_at` | unix timestamp (string) | -- | [23](23.md) |
| `relay` | relay url | -- | [42](42.md), [17](17.md) |
| `relays` | relay list | -- | [57](57.md) |
| `server` | file storage server url | -- | [96](96.md) |
| `subject` | subject | -- | [14](14.md), [17](17.md) |
| `summary` | summary | -- | [23](23.md), [52](52.md) |
| `thumb` | badge thumbnail | dimensions in pixels | [58](58.md) |
| `title` | article title | -- | [23](23.md) |
| `web` | webpage URL | -- | [34](34.md) |
| `zap` | pubkey (hex), relay URL | weight | [57](57.md) |
| name | value | other parameters | NIP |
| ----------------- | ------------------------------------ | ------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------- |
| `e` | event id (hex) | relay URL, marker, pubkey (hex) | [01](01.md), [10](10.md) |
| `p` | pubkey (hex) | relay URL, petname | [01](01.md), [02](02.md) |
| `a` | coordinates to an event | relay URL | [01](01.md) |
| `d` | identifier | -- | [01](01.md) |
| `-` | -- | -- | [70](70.md) |
| `g` | geohash | -- | [52](52.md) |
| `h` | group id | -- | [29](29.md) |
| `i` | external identity | proof, url hint | [39](39.md), [73](73.md) |
| `k` | kind | -- | [18](18.md), [25](25.md), [72](72.md), [73](73.md) |
| `l` | label, label namespace | -- | [32](32.md) |
| `L` | label namespace | -- | [32](32.md) |
| `m` | MIME type | -- | [94](94.md) |
| `q` | event id (hex) | relay URL, pubkey (hex) | [18](18.md) |
| `r` | a reference (URL, etc) | -- | [24](24.md), [25](25.md) |
| `r` | relay url | marker | [65](65.md) |
| `t` | hashtag | -- | [24](24.md), [34](34.md) |
| `alt` | summary | -- | [31](31.md) |
| `amount` | millisatoshis, stringified | -- | [57](57.md) |
| `bolt11` | `bolt11` invoice | -- | [57](57.md) |
| `challenge` | challenge string | -- | [42](42.md) |
| `client` | name, address | relay URL | [89](89.md) |
| `clone` | git clone URL | -- | [34](34.md) |
| `content-warning` | reason | -- | [36](36.md) |
| `delegation` | pubkey, conditions, delegation token | -- | [26](26.md) |
| `description` | description | -- | [34](34.md), [57](57.md), [58](58.md) |
| `emoji` | shortcode, image URL | -- | [30](30.md) |
| `encrypted` | -- | -- | [90](90.md) |
| `expiration` | unix timestamp (string) | -- | [40](40.md) |
| `goal` | event id (hex) | relay URL | [75](75.md) |
| `image` | image URL | dimensions in pixels | [23](23.md), [52](52.md), [58](58.md) |
| `imeta` | inline metadata | -- | [92](92.md) |
| `lnurl` | `bech32` encoded `lnurl` | -- | [57](57.md) |
| `location` | location string | -- | [52](52.md), [99](99.md) |
| `name` | name | -- | [34](34.md), [58](58.md), [72](72.md) |
| `nonce` | random | difficulty | [13](13.md) |
| `preimage` | hash of `bolt11` invoice | -- | [57](57.md) |
| `price` | price | currency, frequency | [99](99.md) |
| `proxy` | external ID | protocol | [48](48.md) |
| `published_at` | unix timestamp (string) | -- | [23](23.md) |
| `relay` | relay url | -- | [42](42.md), [17](17.md) |
| `relays` | relay list | -- | [57](57.md) |
| `server` | file storage server url | -- | [96](96.md) |
| `subject` | subject | -- | [14](14.md), [17](17.md), [34](34.md) |
| `summary` | summary | -- | [23](23.md), [52](52.md) |
| `thumb` | badge thumbnail | dimensions in pixels | [58](58.md) |
| `title` | article title | -- | [23](23.md) |
| `web` | webpage URL | -- | [34](34.md) |
| `zap` | pubkey (hex), relay URL | weight | [57](57.md) |
Please update these lists when proposing new NIPs.