Is there any benefit to host my own instance?

  • ubergeek77@lemmy.ubergeek77.chat
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    1 year ago

    I did. The benefits as I see them:

    • I can still use Lemmy if the instance I would have used as my “home instance” ever went down.
    • Even if a public instance doesn’t go down, all this extra load is making strange bugs surface that I don’t encounter (I still have the live refresh bug everyone has, but not this one).
    • I have full control over my account.
    • If I ever want to get to customizing my UI later, I can.
    • Content I create originates on my instance, and I have full control over it. I can’t stop other instances from caching what I post publicly, but this still gives me more data governance.
    • I can curate my “All” tab to only show stuff I actually want to see, instead of trying to figure out how to block communities (not sure if that’s possible for regular users).
    • I get a custom domain which I think is pretty neat.
  • sinnerdotbin@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been looking to do the same for the many pros I’ve seen posted here, but maybe someone can give me some clarity on a very big downside to me.

    From my understanding most instances are pretty liberal with federating anyone, then blacklisting bad actots or problematic instances. However as adoption grows is there not the potential for larger instances to move towards a whitelist, and possibly move towards only federating with known, established instances or ones with established conditions? Possibly flat out banning personal instances due to moderation overhead?

    Perhaps my understanding is incorrect, but seems to me that there could be a big future risk your personal server turns into an island and all of your past engagement is no longer in your control.

    • bananahammock@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      I’m with you. I think the comparison to email that a lotnof people have been doing works well. I can see lots of hoops to jump through to maintain federation.

      • sinnerdotbin@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        The analogy works to some extent, but it is a gross oversimplifications in most regards. But yeah, keeping up with maintaining a small mail server if you expect not to continually end up in SPAM is a royal pain.

        Will be interesting to see how it develops. Could see a movement towards RBL type block lists, but with the lack of tools available at the moment I think most admins are going to end up having to take some pretty drastic actions at times.

  • Korgen@lemmy.korgen.xyz
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    1 year ago

    I run my own instance, the benefit is privacy and reliability. Everything is controlled on your own server. You also aren’t reliant on someone else running an instance that could go down at any time, either permanently or an outage. Been a problem with Lemmy.ml recently.

    • StrangeWorrier@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      You also aren’t reliant on someone else running an instance that could go down at any time, either permanently or an outage.

      You have to worry about it yourself though.

    • jason@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      How is your RAM/storage usage? I’m interested in setting up my own instance (no communities, just a username that will always be here) but don’t want to upgrade my VPS again. I already had to do that spinning up a Mastodon server.

    • Kyoyeou (Ki jəʊ juː)@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I was asking myself a question, if you comment like you did here Is it saved in the server on which the original post is, or is it saved on your server?

      • SmugBedBug@lemmy.iswhereits.at
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        1 year ago

        Kind of both. His server has a mirror of the community. When he comments it gets saved on his server and the his server communicates with the original server. In turn the original server also communicates his comment with other federated servers.

        • pzza@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          If data is migrated from server to server, as the community grows in size, the data to be maintained on each server also grows in size? Also i’ve seen some servers allow the creation of new users/communities, but some don’t… whats the point of that if the data is just replicated anyway?

  • longyap@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    less thing to worries like you dont need an email to use it from single user instance, lemmy now dont have 2nd authentication like totp at the moment and may it have risk to get pawned and leak your email address so yeah it is to run your own single user instance

  • gccalvin@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    So if I made my own Lemmy instance, and subscribed to !selfhosted, does that mean if Lemmy.world went down, the !selfhosted community is still up?

    • florge@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yesterday I saw a beehaw (I think) community thread which got locked by the beehaw mods but because it was federated ppl on other instances could still comment. I think !selfhosted would be still be up on your instance if lemmy.world went down.

    • stown@lmy.rndmm.us
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      1 year ago

      I believe that any posts and comments that were pulled and stored on your server will remain but new posts or comments will no longer federate. I’m actually not sure if new posts would be possible at all but you could always test it by setting up 2 servers.

  • nii236@lemmy.jtmn.dev
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    1 year ago

    I’m selfhosting Lemmy and its SUPER fast. Just think of it more of a personal caching layer than anything else.

      • nii236@lemmy.jtmn.dev
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        1 year ago

        Just the cheapest Digital Ocean instance that is on a 2 core CPU. It helps that its just me on there, so I don’t have to share with anyone… yet.

  • idle@158436977.xyz
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    1 year ago

    I did it. So far I’ve noticed a few things, for example you have to populate/federate the communities yourself, and it can take a long time. It took hours to retrieve and catch up all the lemmy.world posts. I expect it to be an ongoing thing. When you first connect to a community, it downloads the first 20 posts, but all the comments are empty.

    The plus side though is it is very fast for me. And nobody can delete my profile.

      • Joe B@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        You gotta remember, The blackout brought us refugees I don’t think lemmy planned for this. I think the updates that are coming will address all of this. Reddit is decades old. Lemmy is new to all of us. We just gotta wait and eventually it will become second nature and we will be as good as Reddit

  • drdaeman@lemmy.zhukov.al
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    1 year ago

    Pros: you [sort of] own your Fediverse identity; you can make any changes to your instance you want (if you know how to do it); you’re in control of whom you peer with.

    Cons: maintenance burdens (especially if you make any changes); content discovery complexity; possibly slightly less privacy (as you’re the only user of the instance, whatever is visible about it can be directly attributed to your activity). All solvable, of course.

  • Johannes Jacobs@lemmy.jhjacobs.nl
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    1 year ago

    For me the benefit is uniformity (not sure if thats a word) i can have a matrix account, a mastodon account, a lemmy account, all sorts of fediverse accounts all under my own domain.

    This comes next to the already mentioned benefits ofcourse :)

  • jon@lemmy.tf
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    1 year ago

    From what I’ve seen and read, server to server traffic is less taxing on instances than client to server. So even if your instance is JUST you, it would be your instance talking to everything else so it would have some net benefit on the federation. But it would take a lot of users self-hosting solo instances for this to help in any noticeable way, I’d think.

    There is certainly no downside to running a solo instance, if you’re even slightly interested I would say go for it!

  • luis@kleptonix.com
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    1 year ago

    Running my own instance using AWS’s free tier for now, though I think I’ll keep it after. It makes scaling soo easy and simple if my instance ever takes off. Which I don’t know if it ever will lol. The reason why I even created one is to actually use my domain name for something rather than keep paying for a domain that I’ll never use for anything.

  • infinitevalence@discuss.online
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    1 year ago

    I was discussing this with other lemmings on matrix and it seems there is not much help if you dont have a community to build on your own instance. Now if you do host for yourself then you can federate with other instances to subscribe and pull from their communities which does reduce the total load on those services but that is about it.

    Communities are going to Win/Loose based on personalities and critical mass, and the people hosting those communities will just have to increase their hosting needs.

  • Jeena@jemmy.jeena.net
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    1 year ago

    I feel that speed is the biggest benefit. I was on kbin.social and in the beginning everything was fine, but after a while when they got more and more users it was terrible. Every second click led me to cloudflare sometimes even with the capcha.

    On my own instance now since yesterday everything is so fast! I chose lemmy because it’s written in Rust and I have the feeling that it will be more resourceful and with less bugs than /kbin because of that ^^

    • matt@lemmy.koski.co
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, I’m running on an instance of just me and my wife, biggest downside is needing to subscribe to communities before we get content, but its sooo much faster.

      • Jeena@jemmy.jeena.net
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        1 year ago

        I almost think this is a blessing because you don’t get so overwhelmed with stuff you don’t care about and only see what you’re looking for. But yes the UI for it is not very good yet.

        • AFallingAnvil@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          I’ve taken to just blocking the more popular communities I don’t care about, like sports stuff

      • death916@lemmy.death916.xyz
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        1 year ago

        Once I subbed to a few things now it seems my all feed gets content from servers and communities I’m not subscribed too. Just took a bit. Mostly from smaller foreign ones right now tho.

  • fcuks@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    In my navigation of the fediverse the last few days I’ve noticed a few people running instances of mastodon and lemmy with just themselves or 1 or 2 other people etc.

    If you into tinkering and selfhosting, why not :D Means you’re in full control of what other instances you federate with/can see etc.