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Subscribing to publications #797
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I think "push subscriptions" are a fetish. You can't really reach people if they don't have a client they voluntarily run that fetches your stuff. That is true for email: people have to open their email inbox and read your stuff. That is true for Nostr DMs and anything else (perhaps not carrier pigeons). I never check my Nostr DMs and I don't recommend people to use them, I think it would be a huge mistake to make a new ecosystem of stuff that relies on Nostr DMs. Nostr DMs are clunky and very bad in comparison to stuff like Telegram or email clients, and to make them better while also creating the expectation that they will be supported on all Nostr apps will involve huge amounts of work on all clients, it's a big waste. If instead that effort could be spent on creating 2 or 3 very lightweight simple apps that just did the subscription management part and fetched your NIP-23 articles directly (based on some list like you suggested, for example) and displayed them to you that would be much better and much more healthy to the network. If someone wants to make other kinds of subscriptions then that would be another list with another kind, and these same apps would probably support these too. Yes, users would have to open these apps -- but this is no different than opening their email apps. |
There are a few different concepts mixed into this issue.
The implementation for each of these 3 types of UXs will be vastly different IMO. It makes sense to break the discussion and solve each one individually. |
Here are my very long two cents: Free marketing communicationsI don’t think that we need a separate list for free marketing communications. If somebody follows a business or a content creator on Nostr, it’s reasonable to receive marketing communications as regular kind 1 or kind 30023 notes in whatever client you use to read them. The one thing that I would like to see, as the publisher of a newsletter, is for Habla.news to automatically send a kind 1 note when I publish a kind 30023. This kind 1 note should contain the summary and a link to the long form note on Habla.news. This extra kind 1 note achieves two things:
Paid marketing communications (subscriptions)Here we need a separate list. The list should be private and managed by the content creator / business. Habla.news could host a relay dedicated to subscriptions that only accepts queries for content from npubs that belong to the subscription list and the response should be sent encrypted with the npub of the subscriber so that only the intended subscriber can read it. This will require a new kind and will put some processing requirements on the relay. Additionally, on their website, Habla.news could show the summary and the first paragraph to everybody but only show the full note to users who log in and belong to the subscriber list. Habla.news should charge for this service. Creators would publish only on one site and not broadcast this content to other relays because i) they are paying to the publishing relay / site; and ii) they need to trust that the relay / site will manage the exposure correctly. Subscription list managementThe list should be private and managed by the content creator / business. Option 1: by Habla.news
Option 2: by a service that is not the publisher like nostr.build
Extra thoughtsThe subscriber relay would allow business / content creators to run their own subscription relay to distribute their paid content and keep things in house as long as this new kind that encrypts the content with the npub of the receiver is supported by the clients. |
It occurs to me that a good subscription system can be a service that the author uses, and is based on blind signatures to add interested people to a specific list. For example imagine that there is an app that is responsible for generating subscription lists, this app is able to create a small form or widget for users to leave their data, depending on the type of list or service expected this can more or less requirements to complete the subscription and add a new user, such as a paywall, etc.. Once the user subscribes the server updates the list, this list can be public or private, and the author will always have it at hand to send his new publications to his subscribers. Then, once this point is reached, the different platforms can integrate it in a simple way, simply by requiring the coordinates of that list. Just throwing out ideas, but it could be an interesting model. |
I believe the service could be a DVM. You simply create a request with your post and a list of individuals and the DVM ships the events in the way you want:
We can have multiple DVMs with slight differences in how to deliver this content and even multiple event kinds being used. When we were testing NIP-24 for paid subscribers, we realized that for large groups (1000+ people), the phone wouldn't be very effective on singing and sending a new event to each receiver. So a DVM could solve this issue. On top of that, since in many of these models the sender can be known (e.g. when it is a company), the DVM can use a non-random GiftWrapped signing key to identify itself or the sender when talking to relays. This will help everyone differentiate real marketing servers from random spam out there. |
My take on this is very simple: use #784 "unbounded lists" to list one to millions of "blog" subscribers and then send DMs to notify subscribers. Upon Alice subscribing to an author's "blog" two things happen:
Now use bot/api keypair strictly to send DMs (currently NIP-04) notifying subscribers of new articles etc. Don't spam or use this keypair to other things. |
I agree, an unbounded list sounds like a great way to manage subscriptions. |
Thanks all for your input. Agree https://github.com/arthurfranca/nips/blob/bunch-of-events/61.md#people-list appears to be exactly what we are looking for. Upon subscription clients should:
DMs are far from ideal but the privacy tradeoff for this usecase seems decent to me. |
E-mail marketing is an established strategy to reach people with subjects of their interest.
Many blogs on centralized platforms such as Medium or Substack (and self-hosted with integrated "automated marketing platforms") have tools to build and broadcast notifications to their audience for different reasons:
On nostr, long-form notes are difficult to discover because most clients don't support them. Specific regular notes can also be easy to miss. And there is currently no way to build a subscriber list to send (private) exclusive content to.
The goal is to enable sites like Habla.news to have feature parity with Substack and alternatives, and more in general, for any blog to manage subscriptions and/or deliver notifications and exclusive content over nostr.
Subscription management
This basically means adding/removing oneself from a publication's subscribers list (subscription status).
Implementation options:
subscribe weekly
), equivalent to existing some e-mail mailing list systems (brittle and archaic)where
p
is the author's/publication's pubkey andd
the specific content/newsletter.However, some additional data appears to be necessary:
Privacy:
content
field encrypted?Broadcasting
Notifications could be delivered via a kind 1 (which would appear in clients under Notifications); this would require publishing a note
p
-tagging all subscribers. The downsides are privacy (though subscriptions might be public already) and lack of flexibility (no way of sending custom content)Probably the best delivery methods are:
Why notifications over kind 1 or 4? Why not just use a separate app that receives these updates from a regular followed pubkey? UX. Notifications or special content should meet people where they already are, and for nostr these are social (kind 1) clients.
A dedicated kind for subscription notifications is a possibility, too, but it's one more thing for clients to implement. They could perhaps show these next to DMs.
Would this warrant a specific kind of list? Can we implement this with conventions on top of existing primitives? Any feedback is appreciated!
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