draft
optional
This NIP defines new event kinds for public chat channels, channel messages, and basic client-side moderation.
It reserves five event kinds (40-44) for immediate use:
40 - channel create
41 - channel metadata
42 - channel message
43 - hide message
44 - mute user
Client-centric moderation gives client developers discretion over what types of content they want included in their apps, while imposing no additional requirements on relays.
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).
{
"content": "{\"name\": \"Demo Channel\", \"about\": \"A test channel.\", \"picture\": \"https://placekitten.com/200/200\", \"relays\": [\"wss://nos.lol\", \"wss://nostr.mom\"]}",
...
}
Update a channel's public metadata.
Clients and relays SHOULD handle kind 41 events similar to kind 33 replaceable events, where the information is used to update the metadata, without modifying the event id for the channel.Only the most recent kind 41 is needed to be stored.
Clients SHOULD ignore kind 41s from pubkeys other than the kind 40 pubkey.
Clients SHOULD support basic metadata fields:
name
- string - Channel nameabout
- string - Channel descriptionpicture
- string - URL of channel picturerelays
- array - List of relays to download and broadcast events to
Clients MAY add additional metadata fields.
Clients SHOULD use NIP-10 marked "e" tags to recommend a relay.
{
"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>]],
...
}
Send a text message to a channel.
Clients SHOULD use NIP-10 marked "e" tags to recommend a relay and specify whether it is a reply or root message.
Clients SHOULD append NIP-10 "p" tags to replies.
Root message:
{
"content": <string>,
"tags": [["e", <kind_40_event_id>, <relay-url>, "root"]],
...
}
Reply to another message:
{
"content": <string>,
"tags": [
["e", <kind_40_event_id>, <relay-url>, "root"],
["e", <kind_42_event_id>, <relay-url>, "reply"],
["p", <pubkey>, <relay-url>],
...
],
...
}
User no longer wants to see a certain message.
The content
may optionally include metadata such as a reason
.
Clients SHOULD hide event 42s shown to a given user, if there is an event 43 from that user matching the event 42 id
.
Clients MAY hide event 42s for other users other than the user who sent the event 43.
(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.)
{
"content": "{\"reason\": \"Dick pic\"}",
"tags": [["e", <kind_42_event_id>]],
...
}
User no longer wants to see messages from another user.
The content
may optionally include metadata such as a reason
.
Clients SHOULD hide event 42s shown to a given user, if there is an event 44 from that user matching the event 42 pubkey
.
Clients MAY hide event 42s for users other than the user who sent the event 44.
{
"content": "{\"reason\": \"Posting dick pics\"}",
"tags": [["p", <pubkey>]],
...
}
Clients SHOULD use the relay URLs of the metadata events.
Clients MAY use any relay URL. For example, if a relay hosting the original kind 40 event for a channel goes offline, clients could instead fetch channel data from a backup relay, or a relay that clients trust more than the original relay.
If we're solving censorship-resistant communication for social media, we may as well solve it also for Telegram-style messaging.
We can bring the global conversation out from walled gardens into a true public square open to all.