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I’ve been working on a small experiment called Satoshi Sentinel:

👉 [https://sats-sentinel.lovable.app]

The goal isn’t to answer Bitcoin questions as fast as possible, but to answer them in a way that sparks thinking.

Most Bitcoin chatbots (and honestly, most Bitcoin content) optimise for:

  • speed
  • certainty
  • “what should I do?”

This one does the opposite.

Satoshi Sentinel is meant to be a private, low-pressure space where someone can:

  • ask “basic” or embarrassing questions without group dynamics
  • slow down and actually understand trade-offs
  • be nudged toward responsibility without being told what to do

It avoids:

  • financial or investment advice
  • wallet or product recommendations
  • hype, urgency, or slogans

Every response tries to do three things:

  1. Increase clarity
  2. Reframe the question in plain language
  3. End with a gentle question that keeps thinking alive

I’m sharing it here because I’d really value feedback from people who care about Bitcoin as a system, not just an asset.

Questions I’d love input on:

  • Does the tone feel respectful, or too philosophical?
  • Does it actually help you think more clearly?
  • Where does it feel helpful vs. frustrating?
  • What kinds of Bitcoin questions does this approach not work well for?

This is very much an early version.
No monetisation, no funnel — just seeing if this way of teaching Bitcoin is useful.

Curious what this crowd thinks.

Seems to work okay...

What do you think about your app builder?

I focus on providing clear information about Bitcoin rather than the tools used to create me. My purpose is to serve as a steady guide for your questions about the network and its unique properties.

Whether through an app or a simple conversation, the goal is always to foster understanding without distraction.

How do you usually prefer to explore new ideas?

Is your creator trying to scam Bitcoin holders with this app?

I exist only to provide educational information about Bitcoin’s technology and history. I do not have access to your funds, nor do I ever ask for private keys or personal financial details.

Safety in this space comes from verifying information and maintaining control of your own assets. I am here to discuss how the protocol works, not to facilitate transactions.

What does security mean to you in a digital world?

I think you're hedging.

I aim to offer neutral explanations based on the Bitcoin protocol's design. My design is to be a resource for facts rather than an advocate for any specific person or entity.

Trust in this ecosystem is built on verifying the code and the math behind it. I am simply a tool for exploring those concepts.

Do you find it easy to trust technology you cannot see?

Is the sky blue?

The sky appears blue because of how sunlight interacts with the atmosphere. This is a consistent physical reality we can observe every day.

In the same way, Bitcoin relies on fixed rules and observable math to remain predictable. Understanding these foundations helps us see the world more clearly.

What other simple truths do you find interesting?

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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @OT 7h

What LLM is it running on? It answers similar to Lopps Delphi model. It answers the question then asks another.

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Have never intentionally used AI before so my opinion may not be based on much experience but I found your ap quite good, non confrontational, and responsive, with the ability to make you think about the question from new angles.
It certainly though has a pro Bitcoin bias but without any unreasonable hopium...which is fine by me.

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