Event JSON
{
"id": "d163864649e98370f6f11540a8cedc75731c71f6b1f7367c5b4c62df78b9d6d4",
"pubkey": "ef7f41eac88031498f2e9880d40b92e3236027a634801732a629dc8020826788",
"created_at": 1691768531,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"p",
"00b8245690a3de8ebc8d1ad1cb43979f37f3ee3361db29d885a3a4949675e754",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"p",
"2b47670e2c225a042b6be50a3429b76cb5bc2bdb072f099f86bfe6d048e87fad",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"e",
"080cef6395b62c69bd5414d050dc06deac5af8bd577ab202abac4d1201a0c519",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub",
"reply"
],
[
"proxy",
"https://nixnet.social/objects/e47cb666-60ac-4d95-b09b-447d0ed8a671",
"activitypub"
]
],
"content": "nostr:npub1qzuzg45s500ga0ydrtguksuhnuml8m3nv8djnky95wjff9n4ua2qklsvd4 Ah yes, I'd forgotten the wikipedia page says that. In practise, I _believe_ that both directions are still referred to as Merkle Trees; a parent containing hashes of its children vs children containing a hash of its parent.",
"sig": "f3f32e3e4a349eb723ccc26a232de8c7383f8815ccec7add804faa487de56fd0346ed9258197d65541ad93dcd7b924121cc990a3c457545a43fcb3c023b9d8c0"
}