▲ | evbogue 4 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Yes, and running these things is prohibitively difficult such as I've only witnessed two full index attempts and no alternative plc directories. Bluesky should make these easier so your average Linux admin can attempt to host the full stack, as opposed to only being able to host a PDS. This would eliminate the criticism about Bluesky's design. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | anon7000 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
AT Proto isn’t really supposed to be about individuals self hosting the whole thing. The system is supposed to be global, distributed, and shared, not isolated to one person self-hosting the whole stack. One person should be able to host a resource and connect it to the network (esp to host their own data). It’s just a different design goal compared to full-stack self-hosting. Fundamentally speaking, you can’t run Twitter at scale on a home laptop. But if lots of people band together their resources by hosting distributed microservices, they can self host it together. That’s what AT Proto is trying to solve | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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▲ | bnewbold 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
If you want a service which indexes every post in the public network, including from folks you don't follow, that is just going to require resources. I think $200/month for a full-network index (as zepplin does) is very reasonable and approachable for organized groups without external funding. Many Mastodon instances cost more than that, and provide a must smaller scope of indexing. If you want a small scaled down setup for just a small community, which still interoperates with the full network but doesn't have a complete network, there are setups like AppViewLite, which can run on, eg, an old laptop at home: https://github.com/alnkesq/AppViewLite Personally, I don't think individualist self-hosting is a necessary or helpful goal for indexing the network. Most humans are not interested in spending the time or learning the skills to do this, even if it was as easy as setting up a self-hosted blog with RSS. I think small collectives (orgs, coops, communities, neighborhoods, companies, etc) exist and can fill this role. Regardless, this is moving the discussion, which was about whether it was possible to decentralize each component the network, not whether it was pragmatic for individuals to self-host the whole thing. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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▲ | jacob2161 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
I agree there's a lot of room for improvement in making it easier. But certain things like full-network relays/app views just have inherent bandwidth/storage/compute costs associated with them but it's definitely something a non-profit (like Internet Archive) could easily afford to do. The PLC service could likely be hosted for ~$40/mo. |