A Peer-to-Peer Social Layer
NODAL inherits its architecture from Satoshi Nakamoto's 2008 whitepaper, Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System. Each section below maps one of Bitcoin's primitives to a NODAL design decision.
Read the original whitepaper- Section 1
Introduction
Satoshi (2008)
“Commerce on the Internet has come to rely almost exclusively on financial institutions serving as trusted third parties.”
NODAL
Social platforms rely on advertising middlemen who own identity, ranking, and payment. NODAL removes them: peers talk, trade, and tip directly.
- Section 2
Transactions
Satoshi (2008)
“An electronic coin is a chain of digital signatures. Each owner transfers the coin by digitally signing a hash of the previous transaction.”
NODAL
A NODAL post is signed by your sovereign identity. A tip is a Lightning payment from your address to theirs — value moves with the message.
- Section 3
Timestamp Server
Satoshi (2008)
“The solution we propose begins with a timestamp server. It takes a hash of a block of items to be timestamped and widely publishes the hash.”
NODAL
Posts, tips, and events are timestamped on the public feed. The chronological order is the record — no algorithmic re-ranking.
- Section 4
Proof-of-Work
Satoshi (2008)
“Proof-of-work is essentially one-CPU-one-vote. The majority decision is represented by the longest chain.”
NODAL
Reputation is proof-of-work for humans: verified actions, fulfilled events, merchant interactions. One real action, one badge — not one bot, one like.
- Section 5
Network
Satoshi (2008)
“The steps to run the network are as follows: new transactions are broadcast to all nodes...”
NODAL
Every app in the ecosystem is a node broadcasting into the same identity graph.
- Section 6
Incentive
Satoshi (2008)
“The incentive may help encourage nodes to stay honest. If a greedy attacker is able to assemble more CPU power... he ought to find it more profitable to play by the rules.”
NODAL
Honest behavior pays in sats and reputation. Fraud is cheap to detect and expensive to sustain.
- Section 7
Reclaiming Disk Space
Satoshi (2008)
“Once the latest transaction in a coin is buried under enough blocks, the spent transactions before it can be discarded to save disk space.”
NODAL
Old social noise decays. What persists is the signal: standing reputation, active merchants, recurring events, durable creator work.
- Section 8
Simplified Payment Verification
Satoshi (2008)
“It is possible to verify payments without running a full network node. A user only needs to keep a copy of the block headers of the longest proof-of-work chain.”
NODAL
Your LN address + QR profile is a lightweight identity card. Anyone can verify, pay, and check your reputation without operating any infrastructure.
- Section 9
Combining and Splitting Value
Satoshi (2008)
“Transactions contain multiple inputs and outputs... fan-out is not a problem here.”
NODAL
Tips, event splits, group buys, and merchant payouts compose freely. Many peers fund one project; one creator pays many collaborators.
- Section 10
Privacy
Satoshi (2008)
“The traditional banking model achieves a level of privacy by limiting access to information... A new privacy model is needed.”
NODAL
Your handle is public; your wallet history is not. You choose what to publish, what to keep private, and which keys to rotate.
- Section 11
Calculations
Satoshi (2008)
“We consider the scenario of an attacker trying to generate an alternate chain faster than the honest chain.”
NODAL
Sybil and spam attempts cost real Lightning fees and never accumulate real reputation. Coordinated honest peers always outpace coordinated attackers.
- Section 12
Conclusion
Satoshi (2008)
“We have proposed a system for electronic transactions without relying on trust.”
NODAL
NODAL proposes a system for social coordination without relying on advertising platforms — identity, reputation, and value, peer-to-peer.
If money can be peer-to-peer, so can attention, reputation, and community.