In this episode, Anthony "DeadmanOz" returns as The Good Stuff's first ever repeat guest to discuss the rapidly evolving landscape of AI-assisted development and the critical importance of data sovereignty.
The conversation explores how technical barriers are collapsing, making creative vision the primary requirement for building software. Pete unveils several new projects including SovThing (a Nostr-based file sync alternative) and SuperBased (an encrypted database infrastructure), demonstrating how cryptographic primitives can enable privacy-first applications.
The trio dives deep into the challenges of onboarding non-technical users to key-based systems, the network effects building within the Nostr ecosystem, and why the future belongs to apps that respect their users. Anthony "DeadmanOz" shares his own journey building a family life organizer that prioritizes privacy, and the episode closes with reflections on the sustained creative flow states that modern AI tools enable.
Sound Bites
"The problem is all you need."
"What if the internet didn't treat you like a p****"
"I should never have to see your data."
"You can have sustained manic periods of building."
"Building apps that respect you."
Chapters
00:00 Introduction and First Returning Guest
01:57 K-pop Demon Hunters Update and Blender MCP
03:47 The Cost of AI-Assisted Development
05:26 Anthony's Thesis: Technical Skills Becoming Optional
07:44 Domain Expertise Meets AI Tools
11:02 Scaling Laws and the Data Collection Exercise
19:09 SovThing: Nostr-Based File Syncing
28:51 Opticon: Collaborative Visual Planning with Nostr
33:03 SuperBased: Unruggable Database Infrastructure
40:35 Encryption by Default and Data Sovereignty
44:51 Key Teleport and Onboarding Normies
49:06 Will People Ever Care About Privacy?
57:45 The Vision for a Privacy-First Internet
1:05:35 Anthony's Family Organizer Project
1:17:02 The Irony of Building with Big Tech
1:20:01 Sustained Manic Periods and Future Optimism
Keywords
Nostr, encryption, data sovereignty, SuperBased, SovThing, AI agents, vibe coding, privacy, cryptographic keys, peer-to-peer, local-first, NIP-98, Maple AI, domain expertise, file syncing
Takeaways
- Technical skills are rapidly becoming less necessary as AI tools mature
- creativity and problem identification are becoming the primary requirements.
- Domain experts who adopt AI coding tools early will have significant advantages in building bespoke solutions for their industries.
- Nostr provides powerful primitives for identity, encryption, and discovery that enable privacy-first application architecture.
- The future of software involves apps that never see user data
- encryption by default with user-controlled keys.
- Onboarding non-technical users to key-based systems requires hiding complexity behind familiar username/password interfaces.
- Network effects within privacy-focused ecosystems compound over time as tools built on common standards interoperate seamlessly.
- Companies making conscious decisions to trust big tech with their data are engaging in policy theater rather than genuine security.
- Local-first applications with encrypted sync capabilities offer the best of both worlds - offline functionality with seamless backup.
- The killer app for mass adoption of cryptographic keys may come from agent permissions - the need to give AI fine-grained access to personal data.
- AI-assisted development creates ideal conditions for flow states - rapid progress on challenging problems without traditional roadblocks.
