NIP-89: Recommended Application Handlers
NIP-89
Section titled “NIP-89”Recommended Application Handlers
Section titled “Recommended Application Handlers”draft optional
This NIP describes kind:31989 and kind:31990: a way to discover applications that can handle unknown event-kinds.
Rationale
Section titled “Rationale”Nostr’s discoverability and transparent event interaction is one of its most interesting/novel mechanics. This NIP provides a simple way for clients to discover applications that handle events of a specific kind to ensure smooth cross-client and cross-kind interactions.
Parties involved
Section titled “Parties involved”There are three actors to this workflow:
- application that handles a specific event kind (note that an application doesn’t necessarily need to be a distinct entity and it could just be the same pubkey as user A)
- Publishes
kind:31990, detailing how apps should redirect to it
- Publishes
- user A, who recommends an app that handles a specific event kind
- Publishes
kind:31989
- Publishes
- user B, who seeks a recommendation for an app that handles a specific event kind
- Queries for
kind:31989and, based on results, queries forkind:31990
- Queries for
Events
Section titled “Events”Recommendation event
Section titled “Recommendation event”{ "kind": 31989, "pubkey": <recommender-user-pubkey>, "tags": [ ["d", <supported-event-kind>], ["a", "31990:app1-pubkey:<d-identifier>", "wss://relay1", "ios"], ["a", "31990:app2-pubkey:<d-identifier>", "wss://relay2", "web"] ], // other fields...}The d tag in kind:31989 is the supported event kind this event is recommending.
Multiple a tags can appear on the same kind:31989.
The second value of the tag SHOULD be a relay hint. The third value of the tag SHOULD be the platform where this recommendation might apply.
Handler information
Section titled “Handler information”{ "kind": 31990, "pubkey": "<application-pubkey>", "content": "<optional-kind:0-style-metadata>", "tags": [ ["d", <random-id>], ["k", <supported-event-kind>], ["web", "https://..../a/<bech32>", "nevent"], ["web", "https://..../p/<bech32>", "nprofile"], ["web", "https://..../e/<bech32>"], ["ios", ".../<bech32>"] ], // other fields...}contentis an optionalmetadata-like stringified JSON object, as described in NIP-01. This content is useful when the pubkey creating thekind:31990is not an application. Ifcontentis empty, thekind:0of the pubkey should be used to display application information (e.g. name, picture, web, LUD16, etc.)ktags’ value is the event kind that is supported by thiskind:31990. Using aktag(s) (instead of having the kind of thedtag) provides:- Multiple
ktags can exist in the same event if the application supports more than one event kind and their handler URLs are the same. - The same pubkey can have multiple events with different apps that handle the same event kind.
- Multiple
bech32in a URL MUST be replaced by clients with the NIP-19-encoded entity that should be loaded by the application.
Multiple tags might be registered by the app, following NIP-19 nomenclature as the second value of the array.
A tag without a second value in the array SHOULD be considered a generic handler for any NIP-19 entity that is not handled by a different tag.
Client tag
Section titled “Client tag”When publishing events, clients MAY include a client tag. Identifying the client that published the note. This tag is a tuple of name, address identifying a handler event and, a relay hint for finding the handler event. This has privacy implications for users, so clients SHOULD allow users to opt-out of using this tag.
{ "kind": 1, "tags": [ ["client", "My Client", "31990:app1-pubkey:<d-identifier>", "wss://relay1"] ] // other fields...}User flow
Section titled “User flow”A user A who uses a non-kind:1-centric nostr app could choose to announce/recommend a certain kind-handler application.
When user B sees an unknown event kind, e.g. in a social-media centric nostr client, the client would allow user B to interact with the unknown-kind event (e.g. tapping on it).
The client MIGHT query for the user’s and the user’s follows handler.
Example
Section titled “Example”User A recommends a kind:31337-handler
Section titled “User A recommends a kind:31337-handler”User A might be a user of Zapstr, a kind:31337-centric client (tracks). Using Zapstr, user A publishes an event recommending Zapstr as a kind:31337-handler.
{ "kind": 31989, "tags": [ ["d", "31337"], ["a", "31990:1743058db7078661b94aaf4286429d97ee5257d14a86d6bfa54cb0482b876fb0:abcd", <relay-url>, "web"] ], // other fields...}User B interacts with a kind:31337-handler
Section titled “User B interacts with a kind:31337-handler”User B might see in their timeline an event referring to a kind:31337 event (e.g. a kind:1 tagging a kind:31337).
User B’s client, not knowing how to handle a kind:31337 might display the event using its alt tag (as described in NIP-31). When the user clicks on the event, the application queries for a handler for this kind:
["REQ", <id>, { "kinds": [31989], "#d": ["31337"], "authors": [<user>, <users-contact-list>] }]User B, who follows User A, sees that kind:31989 event and fetches the a-tagged event for the app and handler information.
User B’s client sees the application’s kind:31990 which includes the information to redirect the user to the relevant URL with the desired entity replaced in the URL.
Alternative query bypassing kind:31989
Section titled “Alternative query bypassing kind:31989”Alternatively, users might choose to query directly for kind:31990 for an event kind. Clients SHOULD be careful doing this and use spam-prevention mechanisms or querying high-quality restricted relays to avoid directing users to malicious handlers.
["REQ", <id>, { "kinds": [31990], "#k": [<desired-event-kind>], "authors": [...] }]