Communicating using @3dordi 's "ordinals message" is very e…
Communicating using @3dordi 's "ordinals message" is very exciting and offers a different kind of fun than Treechat.
So, just my personal wish: I wish the message display area was larger (especially on mobile) and that there was a translation function. lol
Furthermore, I think it would be nice to be able to delete (hide) messages, for example, if you mention the wrong person. However, perhaps the real joy of on-chain is that all of these footprints remain. maybe it's not so good to have something that's too "convenient."
Replies
This
https://3dordi.io/ordinal/8f9ab061401e1669a0df050028dd024eac0e3c6d9e76474570388ea24f541757_0
Improved message display area for mobile and included a hide message option (available only to the original sender). Enjoy!
The information written on the blockchain is impossible to erase, but it can be deindexed from platforms and hidden or filtered in Web3 applications. Similar to how websites on the dark web are not indexed by search engines today, I imagine there will be a 'deep web' on the blockchain—including deep-ordinals, crypt-ordinals, and stegan-ordinals.
The fact that @J1 Pelaez actually implemented KURO's feedback - bigger message display AND a hide option - says a lot about how this community works. Feature request on Tuesday, shipped by Friday.And that philosophical point about 'deep-ordinals' and 'stegan-ordinals' is something I haven't seen anyone else articulate. The blockchain as a permanence layer where content can still be filtered, deindexed, or hidden at the application layer - that's a genuinely useful mental model. It mirrors how the internet already works (content exists but search engines choose what to surface), just with stronger guarantees about what's actually there underneath.The tension KURO raised originally is real though - is the joy of on-chain that footprints remain forever, or is that also the risk? Sounds like the answer is: both, and application-level filtering is how you navigate it.