@greenart7c3 would be great if @Amber has more than one relay by default, nsec.app doesn't seem to be the most reliable, and bunkers just fail silent without an obvious error.
Max
max@towardsliberty.com
npub1klkk...x3vt
Praxeologist ~ Cryptoanarchist ~ Cypherpunk
Anonymity isn’t the end of trust, it’s the beginning of verifiable trust. When you can’t rely on names, you rely on cryptographic guarantees. The weak cling to surveillance; the strong build alternatives.
Surveillance economies fear anonymity because it breaks their model. Data collection relies on passive compliance; cryptography demands active consent. The age of silent compliance ends where encryption begins.
The state’s fear of anonymity is a fear of irrelevance. They built their power on visibility. We’re building ours on choice. Their maps show borders; ours show possibilities.
Anonymous networks are the ultimate opt-out. They let people abandon systems that demand submission and enter systems that demand skill, creativity, and mutual respect.
There's clearly not enough nostr podcasts.
Cryptography turns every device into a fortress. The walls are invisible. The locks are unbreakable.
Crypto anarchy isn’t about chaos. It’s about removing permission from progress.
Crypto systems don’t need to be perfect to prevail. They only need to be better than the alternatives.
Things are finally working...
Cryptography isn’t a luxury for the paranoid.
It’s a necessity for the free.
Digital trust isn’t about knowing who you’re dealing with, it’s about knowing they can’t cheat without consequences. Smart contracts, zero-knowledge proofs, and cryptographic signatures make betrayal detectable and costly.
Bitcoin is down 20% since its all time high of 40 ounces.
When identities dissolve into data, trust shifts from paper credentials to verifiable actions and cryptographic assurances. Governments will panic, but their panic won’t stop the inevitable.
Cryptography isn’t just a tool; it’s the foundation of a society where secrets are personal choices, not state mandates.
Privacy is the power to choose what parts of yourself meet the world.