Today marks DAY SIX of the "Rizful 300" awards initiative. Each day, starting October 30th 2025, we are highlighting 10 Nostr OGs, and sending each a zap of 10,000 sats, for a total of 3,000,000 satoshis, over 30 days. Today's "Rizful 300" award winners are: @Piez, @Nikos, @beejay, @BankSith, @π•Ύπ–Šπ–— π•Ύπ–‘π–Šπ–Šπ–•π–ž, @Eric FJ πŸͺ¬βš‘️, @Orange🍊ManπŸ‘€, @Alan β‚Ώ Watts ⚑️, @Furious Honey Badger ⚑️, and @2140.wtf #blockworkgallery Thank you all for your service to Nostr!
@β‚ΏujuX Seeing an interesting issue when we try to zap you -- it looks like you are receiving the zaps, but wallet of satoshi is not producing a zap receipt. Strange. Is there something different about your wallet of satoshi account? are you possibly using the new "non-custodial" type of wallet of satoshi account? This is strange.
Please exercise caution with this highly misleading podcast: The most dangerous element of Spark is actually revealed in this podcast. You just need to listen carefully. Early in the podcast, Livera equates a Spark Service Provider (SSP) with an LSP (Lightning Service Provider). Hurly replies that it is "something like" an LSP. This is incredibly dangerous misinformation. And: 24:34 Hurley "... to your question of, like, how many operators there are, currently there are two operators.. we are about to announce a third one, that will be added, and we expect that there will be many, many more...." Look at that phrase "that will be added." This is an huge red flag. The LSP standard is OPEN. It's based on a public specification, which you can find on the BLIPS repository: Anyone can run an LSP. There are dozens of LSPs. If one goes down, you can easily switch to a different one. LSPs do NOT know the IP address where payments originate from, or where payments are going. By contrast: The SSP standard is CLOSED. ONLY LightSpark can run an SSP, and may or may not decide, at some point, to "add" other SSPs. (LightSpark has not released their server-side SSP code -- likely because if they were to release it, it would show very clearly that the "self-custodial" marketing they are doing around Spark is an obvious scam. To get your funds out of the Spark "ecosystem" -- onto the Lightning Network, you have to allow LightSpark to custody your funds on one of the Lightning Nodes that they control. I do think that regulators aren't stupid, and will ultimately catch on to this, and, next time there is a Democratic administration, LightSpark will be shut down, or just have to KYC all their users. But I digress...) The critical point is this: As long as nobody but the Marcus family can run an SSP, this means that ANY usage of Spark requires USING WEB SERVERS CONTROLLED BY THE MARCUS FAMILY. The companies that quietly sold out their users to LightSpark -- currently Breez, Joltz, Wallet Of Satoshi, Cake Wallet, Blitz, and more coming soon -- are allowing LightSpark COMPLETE visibility into both their user's transactions AND their user's IP addresses. This is just so dangerous. There is one more very misleading section of this podcast: 33:15 Livera "... I know with Phoenix, which is a well-known lightning wallet... the team at ASYNC, I think it was a similar kind of thing for them, where they said, yeah, obviously, ASYNC is the Lightning routing node, so obviously they know your payments.. but eventually the idea..." This is horribly misleading. When you send a Spark transaction, since all of these transactions go through Spark, one company (LightSpark), has FULL visibility of both the entry and exit points of the transaction. When you send a payment to a Phoenix wallet, you do so across the Lightning Network. The Lightning Network has been CAREFULLY designed from the ground-up for privacy. Even if Phoenix runs the ACINQ node, and that node is the "last hop" in an inbound payment to a Phoenix user, please be assured that Phoenix has NO WAY of knowing WHERE that payment came from, and CERTAINLY has no idea of what I.P. address originating the payment. Comparing the proprietary Spark API -- controlled by one family -- to something like the Lightning Network..... Steven, please reconsider what you are doing. This is dangerous for Bitcoin.
Please everyone, when we look back on this moment a year from now, after the Spark thing is over and we're back to open standards... let's remember which companies were willing to sell out their users to LightSpark, and which were not.
Most humans originate from lineages where 2%+ of the population died by violence every year. This is why men now have a hard time finding their place in the world. They’ve literally been bred for war, not work.
By my measure, activity on Lightning has increased significantly in the last 2 weeks. But probably not for the reason you think it has. Also, probably not for the reason I think it has. That's what's fascinating about Lightning. Nobody REALLY knows where payments are coming from, or where they are going. They might have theories.... but those theories are probably wrong...
@npub10pen...n34f @ODELL Any organization that funds btc projects and cares about decentralization and privacy should immediately stop any support for Breez, Lightspark, Wallet Of Satoshi, CakeWallet, Blitz or any other bad actor who is supporting LightSpark's dangerous, zero-privacy, centralized solution... more details: ... that fact that OpenSats is giving money to Blitz and CakeWallet is just insane
@YakiHonne looks like you have started blurring some images by default. How do I turn that off? image