Event JSON
{
"id": "a471b0bd8c7bfaa64fd339376accbc725deaab512be452aa2532e8b5a28dddf9",
"pubkey": "ae5c5dd684bf26be468d31f7808f43b10a98a6482cd833de2c3760cf401c35c9",
"created_at": 1731482644,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"p",
"29d67b21c0ec2851b37345c586cf5618ae6b86c45ab6ba47354160d9cbd58405",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"p",
"774d614ebcf8fa1536805ff86bdbe7763f4f933e21608f14b43c2b1916f38403",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"e",
"3d77cbe63c323cf363d3e3b896be0a95ad066cbaae44eb38f0ac0568942791cf",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub",
"reply"
],
[
"proxy",
"https://gotosocial.grnwds.uk/users/simon/statuses/01JCJ6GVRGNTW6SY1EHPT2K0HV",
"activitypub"
]
],
"content": "nostr:npub198t8kgwqas59rvmnghzcdn6krzhxhpkyt2mt53e4g9sdnj74sszss5hasj Actually, something occurred to me last night: as happened with Cloudflare a few years, it would be probably be more effective from a sabotage point of view to attempt BGP hijacking against a large provider than have to go snipping undersea cables. The scale of Internet operations these days has moved the risk further up the networking stack.",
"sig": "bf596403ac32afa8f5df089df26e96ab56fdb14c74bb68e4bae20f404bd96ddcab22f7b8cd7d81b5a36983eea78a6d44ef8e21ea7abe70b9c0ef1a1083bdb5e1"
}