If nostr "fails" it still won't have been time wasted, so I agree with you. I'm mostly talking about the tendency fixate on current user numbers, as if that has anything to do with the eventual usefulness of the technology. I was here when it was all just devs building a thing and no one else cared. My motivation hasn't changed since then, and won't change unless and until either 1. someone comes up with a better solution, or 2. the benefits of social media prove to be outweighed by the negative externalities, even when decoupled from centralized control and incentives.
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Glad to hear that!
One more thing: to me, nostr is not social media but the digital identity layer of the internet.
To me, social media as it is on big tech platforms has failed long ago.
But to build useful apps (and I mean literally anything) on sound identities is worth the time and effort.