Event JSON
{
"id": "d2364a22dd94654aaf9aedda4d1fc6012d52550ec6fc45c97fb8d6dcfdf5a1a3",
"pubkey": "ee9d979e7e1418a9f7472baf82dc96082a0d4251b77bcb170a6ecec93fadff64",
"created_at": 1744757526,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"e",
"d3f81624c8381f6d8acb228a0ca5ed541401feb59632ffccaae275e722da5ea6",
"",
"root"
],
[
"e",
"b81de3233b53f27e3ae6c25bdfcd7e6dbf9bb94108762a2c0dc37dd32feade86"
],
[
"e",
"8bd7938fcdd25aac0ce57c1b601b613995697d84e79f5ef593810fa6fde9dc27",
"",
"reply"
],
[
"p",
"68c90cf34467b2c40949f0522b69d759d3fe8709653fa1d49aa0514099458f5c"
],
[
"p",
"ee9d979e7e1418a9f7472baf82dc96082a0d4251b77bcb170a6ecec93fadff64"
],
[
"p",
"266815e0c9210dfa324c6cba3573b14bee49da4209a9456f9484e5106cd408a5",
"",
"mention"
],
[
"r",
"nostrudel.ninja/"
],
[
"r",
"nostrudel.ninja"
]
],
"content": "Well, at least this solves the problem! 🤣 Seriously now, hosting your own Nostr client isn't a bad idea. I honestly don't know the specifics of how noStrudel writes events to relays (this is a good question for nostr:nprofile1qqszv6q4uryjzr06xfxxew34wwc5hmjfmfpqn229d72gfegsdn2q3fgpzfmhxue69uhkummnw3e82efwvdhk6tcpz4mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuerpd46hxtnfduhszythwden5te0dehhxarj9emkjmn99urf278z). Assuming it's just opening a WebSocket directly from the browser, it should work fine. If it's doing anything more complex (i.e. some sort of backend, proxy, etc.), then the nostrudel.ninja/ version won't have access to your relay, while your local client will as it's on the same network. I know for sure that nostrudel.ninja can read from local relays, as shown in my screenshot above. I had a strong impression that the hosted version would also be able to write to local relays, but given your observation, I might be wrong.",
"sig": "9db0f1e2cf0d4bf26ff1eb036fdc18aaf89c8d125ddbfc2ac3f15ddf20f950eb5f39c0673fb4f8b4833c6e566be6efc9a52fa228438099f4d5ddba5e1802c186"
}